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James
Lee CLARK
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Rape - Robbery
Number of victims: 2
Date of murders:
June 7,
1993
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth:
May 13,
1968
Victims profile: Shari
Catherine Crews (female, 17) and Jesus Gilberto Garza (male,
16)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Denton County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on April 11,
2007
Summary:
Clark and accomplice James Richard Brown found teenagers Shari
Catherine Crews and Jesus Garza at Clear Creek north of Denton. Both
Clark and Brown were released from prison less than two weeks
earlier. They had a rifle and a shotgun they had stolen from
vehicles, and they were looking for someone to rob that night.
DNA evidence showed Clark raped Crews several
times before shooting her in the back of the head with a shotgun and
pushing her body into the creek. He put the shotgun under Garza’s
chin and fired, then tossed his body into the creek.
The bodies were discovered the next day after
Clark and Brown showed up at a convenience store covered in sand,
and Brown with a shotgun wound to his leg. Both eventually admitted
being at Clear Creek, blaming the other for the murders. The stock
of the murder weapon and ammunition was found in Clark's home.
Accomplice Brown was also tried for capital
murder but a jury convicted him of robbery and sentenced him to 20
years.
Citations:
Ex parte Clark, Not Reported in S.W.3d, 2004 WL 885583 (Tex.Cr.App.
2004) (State Habeas). Clark v. Johnson, 227 F.3d 273 (5th Cir. 2000) (Federal
Habeas). Clark v. Quarterman, 457 F.3d 441 (5th Cir. 2006) (Federal
Habeas).
Final/Special Meal:
None.
Final Words:
Clark was asked if he had a last statement to make. “Uh, I don’t
know,” he said with a nervous chuckle. “Um, I don’t know what to say.
I don’t know …” Clark then turned and appeared to see the witnesses
behind the glass. “I didn’t know anybody was there,” he said with
another laugh. “Howdy.” With that, he made a noise like a gurgle and
was still.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Inmate: Clark, James Lee
Date of Birth: 5/13/68
TDCJ#: 999095
Date Received: 5/4/94
Education: 9 years
Occupation: Plumber’s Helper
Date of Offense: 6/7/93
County of Offense: Denton
Native County: Caddo Parish Louisiana
Race: White
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Brown
Eye Color: Brown
Height: 05' 09"
Weight: 157 lb
Prior Prison Record: Sentenced to ten years for burglary in Dallas
County. Paroled 5/26/1992.
Texas Attorney General
Monday, April 9, 2007
Media Advisory: James
Clark Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about James Lee Clark, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 11, 2007.
Clark was sentenced to death for the 1993 Denton County rape,
robbery and murder of 17-year-old high school student Shari
Catherine Crews.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On June 7, 1993, the bodies of Shari Crews and
16-year-old Jesus Gilberto Garza, a classmate and acquaintance, were
found in Clear Creek north of Denton. Both had been robbed and shot
in the head the night of June 7, 1993.
Denton County law enforcement officers pulled
Crews’ nude body from the water. Crews had a pair of shorts around
her neck and her bra tied around her wrist. Marks on her other wrist
indicated that she had been bound.
The medical examiner later verified that Crews
had been sexually assaulted and died from a shotgun blast to the
back of the head. Further evidence revealed that rings Crews
normally wore were missing along with keys she usually carried with
her, as well as keys that she kept in the glove compartment of her
car.
Earlier that same morning, paramedics and police
officers were dispatched to a service station in response to a
gunshot victim. Officers arrived to find James Lee Clark and James
Brown, who was suffering from a gunshot wound to the leg. Both Clark
and Brown told the officers that they had been fishing at the Three
Rivers Bridge in Denton County when Brown was accosted by a robber
and shot in the leg.
However, when Clark led the police to the area
where this shooting allegedly took place, there was no sign that the
men had been there fishing or that someone had been shot. After
Clark gave the police several conflicting statements, and the police
further talked with Brown and other witnesses, the police returned
to the creek to look for a second body and two weapons.
Later that day, the body of 16-year-old Jesus
Garza, who had apparently been at the creek with Crews, was pulled
from the water. Garza also died from a shotgun blast to the head
which had been fired from fairly close range. The police also
recovered a .22 rifle with the stock sawed off from the water, and a
.12 gauge shotgun, which was later determined to be the murder
weapon.
DNA evidence taken from Crews’ body was compared
with a sample provided by Clark and proved Clark sexually assaulted
Crews. Blood found on Clark’s tennis shoes was shown to be
consistent with a mixture of Crews’ and Garza’s blood.
Additionally, a search of Clark’s trailer yielded
the sawed-off rifle stock, which was found to match the .22 rifle
found in the creek, and ammunition for the rifle. Evidence was also
presented that, a day or two prior to the murders, Clark,
accompanied by Brown, bought ammunition for the .12 gauge shotgun.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 29, 1994 a Denton County jury found
James Clark guilty of capital murder in the death of Shari Crews,
and on May 3, 1994, the trial court sentenced Clark to death.
On Oct. 2, 1996, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed Clark’s conviction and sentence . On Oct. 6, 1997,
Clark filed a post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus,
presenting eleven challenges to the validity of his conviction and
sentencing. On April 8, 1998, the trial judge adopted the State’s
findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommended that relief
be denied. On July 8, 1998, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
adopted these findings and denied relief.
On September 30, 1998, Clark filed a federal
petition for writ of habeas corpus. On November 10, 1999, the
magistrate court entered findings recommending that the petition for
writ of habeas corpus be denied. On Dec. 13, 1999, the district
court adopted these findings, and denied Clark’s petition for
federal writ of habeas corpus. On Jan. 28, 2000, the district court
denied Clark’s request for a certificate of appealability (COA), and
on March 3, 2000, the district court denied Clark’s motion for
reconsideration.
On Sept. 12, 2000, Clark’s application for COA in
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals was denied. On Feb. 20, 2001, the
U.S. Supreme Court denied Clark’s petition for writ of certiorari.
The trial court set an execution date for November 21, 2002.
However, on November 11, 2002, Clark filed a
subsequent application for writ of habeas corpus in the state court,
raising seven allegations for relief. On November 18, 2002, the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that Clark’s allegation of
mental retardation pursuant to Atkins v. Virginia deserved
consideration. The court issued a stay of execution and remanded the
case to the trial court for consideration of the claim.
An evidentiary hearing was held in the trial
court, after which (and based on findings of the trial court) the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that Clark failed to show,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that he was mentally retarded
and thus exempt from the death penalty under Atkins. Ex parte Clark.
The trial court reset Clark’s execution date for April 27, 2004.
However, on April 23, 2004, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
granted Clark’s motion to file a successive habeas petition in
federal district court and stayed his execution.
On January 20, 2005, the district court rendered
final judgment denying the successive habeas corpus petition. On
March 16, 2005, the district court granted Clark’s application for a
certificate of appealability.
On July 20, 2006, the 5th Circuit Court affirmed
the judgment of the district court and denied habeas relief. On Aug.
29, 2006, the court denied Clark’s petition for rehearing. On Feb.
26, 2007, the Supreme Court denied Clark’s petition for writ of
certiorari. The trial court reset his execution date for April 11,
2007.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
On June 28, 1991, Clark pled guilty to theft by a
check and was confined to the county jail for 20 days, fined, and
ordered to pay restitution.
On Oct. 18, 1989, Clark was convicted and
incarcerated in state prison for the felony offense of burglary of a
building.
On July 12, 1987, Clark was arrested for auto
theft. It does not appear from the record that Clark was ever
convicted of this offense.
The State presented evidence of two burglaries of
motor vehicles committed in the days prior to the capital murder of
Shari Crews.
Killer to reap what he sowed; Clark scheduled
to be executed today for 1993 murder
By Donna Fielder - Denton Record Chronicle
April 11, 2007
Denton County Sheriff’s Cpl. Virginia Nichols
walked as close to the edge of the white sandy beach as she could
that June evening in 1993 and looked at the fallen tree lying across
Clear Creek. The slender body of a girl was floating there, tangled
in the branches.
Nichols was the first officer on the scene of a
reported deceased person. Officers from several agencies soon joined
her as word spread of the horrific crime committed just off FM428
north of Denton. “She just had her arms wrapped around that log. Her
hair was flowing all around. You couldn’t see the wounds in the back
of her head, and I thought she must have drowned,” Nichols said. “We
brought her over to the beach, and I noticed her bra was tied around
one arm. When we turned her over, we all stepped back and gasped.
Nobody said a word for what seemed like an eternity. I told them,
‘OK, we have a homicide here; we need more people.’”
The discovery of the body of Shari Catherine
“Cari” Crews, 17, a look of abject horror frozen on her beautiful
face around the exit wound of a load of buckshot, was the first step
in the process of justice for James Lee Clark Jr., convicted of
raping and murdering her and also accused of shooting to death her
friend, Jesus Garza, 16.
Clark is scheduled to take the final steps in the
justice process today on his way to the execution chamber in the
Walls Unit in Huntsville.
With his appeal rejected by the U.S. Supreme
Court, Clark has little hope of avoiding death by lethal injection,
save for a commutation to a life sentence by Gov. Rick Perry. Clark
declined an interview for this story and his attorney, James
Rasmussen, could not be reached for comment.
A gleaming tribute
The June 7, 1993, murders at Clear Creek off
FM428 north of Denton horrified area residents, and law enforcement
officers who worked the case say it is one they will never forget.
Nichols, now a detective with the Denton Police Department, said the
awful handiwork of James Lee Clark Jr. haunts her still. “I’m glad
he’s finally getting his time to die,” Nichols said. “It’s been too
long coming.” Cari Crews was a popular junior at Ryan High School.
She was a straight-A student and excelled at piano. She volunteered
with the Denton Humane Society and had been elected president of the
campus chapter of Amnesty International for her coming senior year.
Jesus Garza
Jesus Garza was an athlete who played both
football and baseball for Ryan as a sophomore. He was interested in
art, and the two met in an art class the semester before they died.
According to court documents, Clark was born in Caddo Parish, La.
His biological father vanished the day he found out Clark’s mother
was pregnant. Clark told a psychologist hired for an appeals hearing
that he drank his first beer when he was 7 years old and that by 13,
he was frequently drunk. He was regularly smoking pot by the time he
was 13 or 14, according to testimony.
He mowed lawns to obtain money to buy marijuana.
He admitted to the psychologist that he also huffed paint and
gasoline and sometimes used methamphetamine and cocaine when he
could get the money to buy them. One of his favorite types of
buildings to burglarize, he said during that interview, was a church,
because churches were empty for long periods of time and often
contained cash from the last offering.
James Lee Clark
Clark repeated two grades before dropping out of
formal education in the ninth grade, according to records. At 15, he
was sent to the Gainesville State School, a state reformatory for
boys and girls, for theft. After his release at 18, his mother would
have nothing more to do with him, according to the court records.
Later he went to prison on burglary charges, and that’s where he met
James Richard Brown.
Brown grew up in Carrollton and also was
incarcerated for burglary when the two men met. After their releases,
both came to live in a decrepit trailer at a mobile home park in
Aubrey. The two had stolen a shotgun and a rifle in vehicle
burglaries and were looking for someone to rob when they came across
the teens at Clear Creek that night. The part of Clear Creek that
runs along FM428 north of Denton was a popular teen hangout at the
time. The two teens drove there about midnight and were accosted by
Clark, who was 25, and Brown, who was 22. Brown later was convicted
of robbery for his part in the crime and sentenced to 20 years.
Denton police were involved first. Clark and
Brown arrived at a Denton convenience store in the early morning
hours looking for medical help. Brown’s leg had almost been severed
above the knee by a shotgun blast, and he was in danger of bleeding
to death. Denton Detective Margaret Yarbrough didn’t believe the
shaggy, dirty fellows’ story of being robbed and alerted other
officers that the men likely had committed some crime themselves.
Later that day, both teens’ mothers reported them missing in Denton,
and officers were working to find them when the bodies were
discovered.
Sheriff Benny Parkey was a Denton police
detective at that time. He was intimately involved in the case,
interviewing Brown in the hospital and assisting with Clark’s arrest
at a trailer in Aubrey. Parkey said it is time that justice is done
for the teens who were terrorized before being shot in the head and
thrown in the creek. “The execution by lethal injection is much more
humane than the inhumanities these kids suffered that night,” Parkey
said.
That part of Clear Creek is in unincorporated
Denton County, so the murder cases were the responsibility of the
sheriff’s office. Investigator Danny Brown was lead investigator for
the sheriff’s office, but Texas Ranger Kyle Dean soon became case
manager. Danny Brown said he and Dean didn’t sleep for days as the
case quickly unfolded and they hustled to get arrest and search
warrants swiftly but with such accuracy they would stand up under
scrutiny in court.
White sand from the creek side covered both ex-convicts,
tying them to the murders, and James Richard Brown began talking to
detectives from his hospital bed. He told them there was a second
body under the waters of Clear Creek, and Garza was pulled from the
creek about midnight. Investigator Danny Brown has not worked a case
before or since that affected him as much, he said. He shot many of
the crime scene photos of the dead teens, and he will never forget
their faces. “Those were the hardest pictures I’ve ever taken,” he
said.
The autopsy report showed Cari’s tear ducts were
swollen from hours of crying before her death, he said. “I feel that
two kids never got to know their lives. They were never given that
opportunity,” he said. “Clark and Brown have made their own
destinies.”
Dean was a new Ranger who had just been
transferred to Denton. This was his first major case, and he still
remembers it vividly. “It still is one of the most brutal I’ve seen,”
Dean said. “I’m glad to see some resolution to it after all these
years. This execution is proper under the laws of Texas. I hope it
provides some closure for their families.”
DRC/Donna Fielder
James Richard Brown talks to a reporter in 2006
at the Wynn Unit in Huntsville, where he is serving a 20-year
sentence. A jury in his capital murder case in the death of Jesus
Garza instead found him guilty of robbery. Brown still could face
capital murder charges in the death of Cari Crews. The night after
the teens were found, Dean, Parkey, Nichols, Deputy Scott Haney and
several other officers drove to the trailer James Lee Clark and
James Richard Brown shared in Aubrey. They pried open the door and
rushed inside, guns drawn.
Nichols will never forget her first sight of
Clark. He had barricaded the hallway with a table. “I remember Haney
went in and there was a table in the way. He shoved it out of the
way, and Clark was there and he reached for a knife. Haney had his
MP-5 trained on him,” she said. “Clark dropped the knife.” The
officers read Clark his rights and handcuffed him. They put paper
bags on his hands to preserve any evidence such as possible gunshot
residue. “I remember he had on tiger-striped bikini underwear. We
took him to jail like that,” Nichols remembers. “All the neighbors
were standing around in the yard watching when we took him away. He
was public enemy No. 1.”
In the end, Brown and Clark both admitted to
being at Clear Creek that night. They told evolving stories that
started with the lie of watching Garza shoot Crews and ended with
similar tales of the murders. The difference was each said the other
one did the shooting. Both were charged with capital murder. Clark
was convicted and sentenced to death for Crews’ murder in 1994. He
never was tried for Garza’s death. Brown’s trial for Garza’s murder
was delayed because of his injured leg, which he said happened
because he tried to keep Clark from committing the murders.
Brown looked young and defenseless as he sat at
the defense table in a wheelchair. All of his taped statements
professed his sorrow at the murders and his attempts to stop them.
Jurors found him guilty of robbery and sentenced him to 20 years. He
has been eligible for parole twice but the parole board has denied
it.
Brown said in a prison interview in March 2006
that he expects to serve every day of his sentence. He understands
why the victims’ family members were upset that he wasn’t convicted
of murder, he said in the interview. He is sorry that his actions
caused so much suffering, he said, still insisting that Clark shot
him because he tried to stop the murders.
Brown could still be tried for Crews’ death. He
has nightmares about execution, he said. “I dream,” Brown said. “I
dream about that night. But more, I dream of being executed. I dream
about it in great detail. I dream about the gurney and being tied
down. I dream about the needle. I dream about dying.”
Clark’s trial took three months in 1994.
Sheriff’s Sgt. Roger Dunham was assigned to transport Clark back and
forth to trial and his jail cell. After he was found guilty and
Judge Sam Houston pronounced the death sentence, Dunham took Clark
back to the holding cell behind the courtroom. “While I was
unlocking the cage door, I noticed him getting weak in the knees,”
Dunham said. “I helped him into the cell and onto the bench in there,
and then I slammed the door shut and opened the little window. I
watched him to make sure he didn’t try to hurt himself. I could hear
him crying. It was the first emotion I’d seen in him in the 17 weeks
I’d been with him. He was a dead man walking. He’d come to the
realization that this thing was really going to happen.”
Denton County was done with Clark that night.
Dunham left for Huntsville with him at 2 a.m. the next day. When he
reached the prison, the guards shackled Clark and led him into the
building. “Two buses from Houston had just arrived and there must
have been 150 guys in different stages of getting booked in,” he
said. “A lot of them were buck naked. The guards said, ‘Death row
inmate. Everybody face the wall.’ And every man in there turned his
back on Clark and he walked down that long hall with a guard on each
side of him. I’ll always remember he got part of the way down the
hall and he turned around, twisted around all bent over and raised
his shackled hands and waved at me. I thought, he’ll never leave
this place alive.”
Dunham, now retired in Arkansas, returned two
years ago to testify in a hearing to determine whether Clark was too
mentally retarded to understand why he was being put to death after
a Supreme Court decision in another case made that an issue. Dunham
testified that Clark was not retarded, that he took notes during his
trial and directed his defense attorneys in what he wanted them to
do.
Judge Lee Gabriel ruled that Clark was fit for
execution, and state and federal appeals courts have upheld that
ruling. Dunham said it’s time justice was done for Cari Crews and
Jesus Garza. “I’m happy that he finally is getting what is due him,”
Dunham said. “He can meet his maker and explain it to him.”
Clark ends life without apology; Witnesses
watch convicted murderer receive lethal injection
By Donna Fielder - Denton Record-Chronicle
April 12, 2007
HUNTSVILLE — James Lee Clark Jr.’s life ended
with a chuckle and a gurgle at 6:17 p.m. Wednesday, as he tried to
make up his mind whether he wanted to make a last statement.
Clark, already strapped down to a gurney when the
witnesses arrived, blinked and smiled when the prison warden,
Charles O’Reilly, asked if he had a last statement to make. “Uh, I
don’t know,” he said with a nervous chuckle. “Um, I don’t know what
to say. I don’t know …”
Clark then turned and appeared to see the
witnesses behind the glass. “I didn’t know anybody was there,” he
said with another laugh. “Howdy.” With that, he made a noise like a
gurgle and was still. It had taken seven minutes for the three drugs
administered in a lethal injection to take effect.
Garza’s mother, Linda Garza, an uncle and one of
his sisters watched calmly as they stood close to the glass.
Afterward, they were quickly led away by guards and did not comment
on the execution.
Though Clark technically was executed for Crews’
rape and murder, and he never was tried for the killing of Jesus
Garza, 16, the Garza family have said they wanted to feel the
closure of seeing him face his punishment. Clark was the 12th person
to be executed so far this year in Texas.
Clark and his friend James Richard Brown found
the teens at Clear Creek off FM428 north of Denton on June 7, 1993.
They had a rifle and a shotgun they had stolen from vehicles, and
they were looking for someone to rob that night, according to
testimony at the trial. DNA evidence showed Clark raped Crews, 17,
several times before shooting her in the back of the head and
pushing her body into the creek. He put the shotgun under Garza’s
chin and fired, then tossed his body into the creek, according to
court testimony.
The next afternoon a group of teens found Crews’
body floating in the creek, tangled in the branches of a fallen tree.
Brown, who was shot in the leg during the crimes, told police that
another body lay under the water’s surface. Brown was tried for
capital murder but a jury convicted him of robbery and sentenced him
to 20 years. He is incarcerated in the Wynn Unit in Huntsville, a
few miles from the Walls Unit where Clark died.
Former Denton County District Attorney Bruce
Isaacks and former prosecutor Vicki Foster, who tried Clark,
witnessed the execution. Both said afterward that the death was too
easy as penance for what Clark had done. “I was surprised at how
clean, sterile and humane that process was,” Isaacks said. “It was
an easy way out for someone who committed such horrendous crimes.”
Foster said that after all these years, she was
glad to be able to witness the final chapter in the ugly story that
was Clark’s life. “I wanted to have an end to it,” Foster said.
Isaacks said Crews’ parents didn’t witness the
execution because they didn’t want to make her killer that important.
He said the Garzas told him they were glad to see some resolution to
the grief he caused them. “I’m surprised that he didn’t have the
decency to tell the mothers that he was sorry for all he put them
through,” Isaacks said. “He is the poster child for the death
penalty.”
Killer of Denton high school girl executed
By Michael Graczyk - Houston Chronicle
Associated Press - April 11, 2007
HUNTSVILLE — Convicted killer James Lee Clark was
executed today for the rape-slaying of a Denton high school honors
student just days after Clark was paroled from prison almost 14
years ago. When asked by the warden if he had a final statement, "I
don't know," Clark said with a chuckle. "I don't know what to say."
Several seconds passed and Clark noticed witnesses watching him
through a nearby window and blurted out, "Oh I didn't know anybody
was there. Howdy." The drugs were taking effect and he was unable to
say anything more.
Clark's father-in-law, who was among the
witnesses, managed to reply "Howdy" as Clark gasped. "He didn't know
we were here," Irene Wilcox, Clark's spiritual adviser, said. "He
didn't act like he was scared." He was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.,
seven minutes after the lethal chemicals began to flow into his
veins. Clark, 38, was the 12th condemned prisoner executed this year
in Texas, which has accounted for all but one of all the nation's
executions in 2007.
Attorneys went to the U.S. Supreme Court to try
to block the lethal injection, arguing instructions to the jury that
convicted him and decided he should die for the June 1993 killing of
Shari Catherine "Cari" Crews may have been improper. Clark's lawyer,
James Rasmussen, also questioned the decision by Clark's trial
attorneys not to present evidence at the punishment phase of his
trial. The high court turned down the appeal about two hours before
his scheduled execution time.
Capital punishment opponents said Clark, who
dropped out after the ninth grade, should be spared from execution
because he may be mentally retarded and ineligible for the death
penalty under a Supreme Court ruling. But state and federal courts,
including the Supreme Court earlier this year, rejected appeals that
argued Clark was mentally retarded and instead backed prosecutors'
contentions Clark deliberately performed poorly on IQ tests. Three
years ago, Clark came within four days of execution before he won a
reprieve from a federal appeals court so questions about the mental
retardation claims could be resolved.
"I was surprised at how clean, sterile, peaceful
and humane that process was," Bruce Isaacks, the former Denton
County district attorney who prosecuted Clark, said after watching
the execution. "It certainly seemed like the easy way out for
somebody that committed two violent, horrific murders."
Clark already had a stint in the Texas Youth
Commission for juvenile problems, an auto theft arrest and
convictions for burglary and theft by check when he was sent to
prison in 1992 with a 10-year term for burglary. In an era of
crowded Texas prisons, Clark won a parole after serving only 10
months. "He shouldn't have been out," Isaacks said. "The parole
board knew that."
Some two weeks later, Clark and another paroled
burglar, James Brown, were under arrest for the killings of Crews,
17, and a 16-year-old classmate, Jesus Garza. The teenagers' bodies
were found in a creek north of Denton, just north of Dallas. Crews
had been raped. Both victims were shot in the head with a shotgun.
Evidence showed within days of their parole,
Clark and Brown, who were violating parole rules by living together,
stole a shotgun and rifle in burglaries. The shotgun was the murder
weapon. Brown somehow also was wounded with a shotgun blast to his
knee during the attack. Clark called Denton police from a
convenience store to report he and Brown had been robbed and Brown
shot while they were fishing. Skeptical officers questioned the pair
and allowed Clark to go home as Brown went to a hospital. When the
two teenagers were found dead the next day, Clark and Brown soon
were arrested.
Brown, now serving a 20-year prison sentence for
robbery, blamed the fatal shootings on Clark. Clark blamed them on
Brown. DNA evidence tied Clark to Crews' rape and shooting. He was
charged but never tried for Garza's death. The shotgun and a sawed-off
.22-caliber rifle were recovered near the murder scene. The sawed-off
stock of the rifle was found in Clark's trailer home. Evidence also
showed the pair bought ammunition for the shotgun.
Scheduled to die next is Ryan Dickson, 30, set
for lethal injection April 26 for the slayings of an Amarillo couple
during a robbery of their grocery store more than 12 years ago.
Convicted killer of Denton student executed
Dallas Morning News
Associated Press - April 11, 2007
HUNTSVILLE, Texas – Convicted killer James Lee
Clark was executed Wednesday evening for the rape-slaying of a
Denton high school honors student just days after Clark was paroled
from prison almost 14 years ago. When asked by the warden if he had
a final statement, "I don't know," Clark said with a chuckle. "I
don't know what to say." James Lee Clark Several seconds passed and
Clark noticed witnesses watching him through a nearby window and
blurted out, "Oh I didn't know anybody was there. Howdy." The drugs
were taking effect and he was unable to say anything more.
Clark's father-in-law, who was among the
witnesses, managed to reply "Howdy" as Clark gasped. "He didn't know
we were here," Irene Wilcox, Clark's spiritual adviser, said. "He
didn't act like he was scared." He was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.,
seven minutes after the lethal chemicals began to flow into his
veins.
Clark, 38, was the 12th condemned prisoner
executed this year in Texas, which has accounted for all but one of
all the nation's executions in 2007.
Attorneys went to the U.S. Supreme Court to try
to block the lethal injection, arguing instructions to the jury that
convicted him and decided he should die for the June 1993 killing of
Shari Catherine "Cari" Crews may have been improper. Clark's lawyer,
James Rasmussen, also questioned the decision by Clark's trial
attorneys not to present evidence at the punishment phase of his
trial. The high court turned down the appeal about two hours before
his scheduled execution time.
Capital punishment opponents said Clark, who
dropped out after the ninth grade, should be spared from execution
because he may be mentally retarded and ineligible for the death
penalty under a Supreme Court ruling. But state and federal courts,
including the Supreme Court earlier this year, rejected appeals that
argued Clark was mentally retarded and instead backed prosecutors'
contentions Clark deliberately performed poorly on IQ tests.
Three years ago, Clark came within four days of
execution before he won a reprieve from a federal appeals court so
questions about the mental retardation claims could be resolved. "Just
ludicrous," Bruce Isaacks, the former Denton County district
attorney who prosecuted Clark, said of the mental retardation claims.
"He suddenly got mentally retarded two weeks before."
Clark already had a stint in the Texas Youth
Commission for juvenile problems, an auto theft arrest and
convictions for burglary and theft by check when he was sent to
prison in 1992 with a 10-year term for burglary. In an era of
crowded Texas prisons, Clark won a parole after serving only 10
months. "He shouldn't have been out," Isaacks said. "The parole
board knew that."
Some two weeks later, Clark and another paroled
burglar, James Brown, were under arrest for the killings of Crews,
17, and a 16-year-old classmate, Jesus Garza. The teenagers' bodies
were found in a creek north of Denton, just north of Dallas. Crews
had been raped. Both victims were shot in the head with a shotgun.
Evidence showed within days of their parole, Clark and Brown, who
were violating parole rules by living together, stole a shotgun and
rifle in burglaries. The shotgun was the murder weapon.
Brown somehow also was wounded with a shotgun
blast to his knee during the attack. Clark called Denton police from
a convenience store to report he and Brown had been robbed and Brown
shot while they were fishing. Skeptical officers questioned the pair
and allowed Clark to go home as Brown went to a hospital. When the
two teenagers were found dead the next day, Clark and Brown soon
were arrested.
Brown, now serving a 20-year prison sentence for
robbery, blamed the fatal shootings on Clark. Clark blamed them on
Brown. DNA evidence tied Clark to Crews' rape and shooting. He was
charged but never tried for Garza's death.
The shotgun and a sawed-off .22-caliber rifle
were recovered near the murder scene. The sawed-off stock of the
rifle was found in Clark's trailer home. Evidence also showed the
pair bought ammunition for the shotgun.
Scheduled to die next is Ryan Dickson, 30, set
for lethal injection April 26 for the slayings of an Amarillo couple
during a robbery of their grocery store more than 12 years ago.
Texas executes man for murder, rape of teen
Reuter News
April 12, 2007
DALLAS (Reuters) - Texas executed a man by lethal
injection on Wednesday for the 1993 rape and murder of a 17-year-old
girl.
The Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
said James Lee Clark's execution was the 152nd in Texas since Rick
Perry became governor in December 2000, tying the record set by his
predecessor, U.S. President George W. Bush.
Texas leads all states with 391 executions since
it resumed the practice in 1982, six years after the U.S. Supreme
Court lifted a capital punishment ban. Clark was the 12th convict
put to death in the state this year.
So far this year, only one execution in the
United States has occurred outside Texas -- in neighboring Oklahoma
-- as the lethal injection method comes under scrutiny amid growing
concerns it is not as humane or painless as originally thought.
Clark, 38, was condemned for the June 1993
robbery, rape and murder of high school student Shari Crews in
Denton just north of Dallas, who was shot to death after being
sexually assaulted. "I don't know what to say," Clark said in his
last statement. He made no last meal request.
He was executed at the state's death chamber in
Huntsville, north of Houston.
Denton County man executed for killing two
By Robbie Byrd - Huntsville Item
April 11, 2007
A Denton County man was executed Wednesday night
for his part in the rape and murder of a 17-year-old high school
honors student and the murder of her 16-year-old classmate, only
days after he had been released on parole. James Lee Clark, a 38
year-old white male, was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m., seven minutes
after the lethal injection cocktail began to flow.
Clark had been paroled less than a week when he
and fellow parolee James Brown were arrested in the murders of Shari
Catherine Crews and Jesus Garza. Brown was convicted of robbery and
sentenced to 20 years for the June 1993 incident.
When asked to make a final statement, Clark
slightly chuckled and said: “Uh, I don’t know... Um, I don’t know
what to say. I don’t know.” Nealy a full minute passed before Clark
turned to his side to see his father-in-law, Hugo Knobloch, and
spiritual advisor, Irene Wilcox, peering through the glass in the
viewing room. “Oh, I didn’t know anybody was there,” Clark said just
before coughing. “Howdy.”
Knobloch replied “howdy,” but it is unclear
whether Clark heard him as he began coughing loudly and slipped into
unconciousness. “He didn’t know we were here,” Wilcox said to
Knobloch after Clark was pronounced dead. “He didn’t act like he was
scared.”
Clark, 38, was the 12th condemned prisoner
executed this year in Texas, which has accounted for all but one of
all the nation’s executions in 2007.
Attorneys went to the U.S. Supreme Court to try
to block the lethal injection, arguing instructions to the jury that
convicted him and decided he should die for the killing Crews may
have been improper. Clark’s lawyer, James Rasmussen, also questioned
the decision by Clark’s trial attorneys not to present evidence at
the punishment phase of his trial. The high court turned down the
appeal about two hours before his scheduled execution time.
Capital punishment opponents said Clark, who
dropped out after the ninth grade, should be spared from execution
because he may be mentally retarded and ineligible for the death
penalty under a Supreme Court ruling. But state and federal courts,
including the Supreme Court earlier this year, rejected appeals that
argued Clark was mentally retarded and instead backed prosecutors’
contentions Clark deliberately performed poorly on IQ tests.
Three years ago, Clark came within four days of
execution before he won a reprieve from a federal appeals court so
questions about the mental retardation claims could be resolved.
“I was surprised at how clean, sterile, peaceful
and humane that process was,” Bruce Isaacks, the former Denton
County district attorney who prosecuted Clark, said after watching
the execution. “It certainly seemed like the easy way out for
somebody that committed two violent, horrific murders.”
Clark already had a stint in the Texas Youth
Commission for juvenile problems, an auto theft arrest and
convictions for burglary and theft by check when he was sent to
prison in 1992 with a 10-year term for burglary. In an era of
crowded Texas prisons, Clark won a parole after serving only 10
months. “He shouldn’t have been out,” Isaacks said. “The parole
board knew that.”
Two weeks later, Clark and Brown were under
arrest for the killings of Crews and Garza. The teenagers’ bodies
were found in a creek north of Denton, just north of Dallas. Crews
had been raped. Both victims were shot in the head with a shotgun.
Evidence showed within days of their parole, Clark and Brown, who
were violating parole rules by living together, stole a shotgun and
rifle in burglaries. The shotgun was the murder weapon.
Brown somehow also was wounded with a shotgun
blast to his knee during the attack. Clark called Denton police from
a convenience store to report he and Brown had been robbed and Brown
shot while they were fishing. Skeptical officers questioned the pair
and allowed Clark to go home as Brown went to a hospital. When the
two teenagers were found dead the next day, Clark and Brown soon
were arrested.
Brown, now serving a 20-year prison sentence for
robbery, blamed the fatal shootings on Clark. Clark blamed them on
Brown. DNA evidence tied Clark to Crews’ rape and shooting. He was
charged but never tried for Garza’s death. The shotgun and a sawed-off
.22-caliber rifle were recovered near the murder scene. The sawed-off
stock of the rifle was found in Clark’s trailer home. Evidence also
showed the pair bought ammunition for the shotgun.
Scheduled to die next is Ryan Dickson, 30, set
for lethal injection April 26 for the slayings of an Amarillo couple
during a robbery of their grocery store more than 12 years ago.
Adelante.com
Texas is Set to Execute a Mentally Retarded Man
On April 11, 2007. U.S. Supreme Court Atkins Decision be Damned. On
February 26, 2007 the Supreme Court of the United States denied
James Clark's Petition for Writ of Certiorari on a Mental
Retardation Claim. On February 28, 2007 Texas District Judge Lee
Gabriel ordered the State of Texas to execute James Clark on April
11, 2007.
NOTE: On June 20, 2002 in Atkins v. Virgina, 536
U.S. 304 (2002), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it is
unconstitutional to execute the mentally retarded.
This makes James Clark's case a horrible
injustice, for each of the psychological experts who thoroughly
tested Mr. Clark swear that he's mentally retarded. Amazingly, Judge
Gabriel thinks that she knows better than the experts and ruled that
James Clark is not mentally retarded. Just as amazingly, all of the
appellate courts affirmed Judge Gabriel's decision -- the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals, the U.S. District Court, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and now the Supreme Court of the
United States.
James Clark meets the Texas legal definition of
mental retardation. [See Texas Persons With Mental Retardation Act
-- Texas Health & Safety Code, Chapter 591.] Yet trial judge Lee
Gabriel has been allowed to supercede these laws and rule that for
the purpose of the death penalty James Lee Clark is not mentally
retarded.
BACKGROUND SUMMARY
After James Lee Clark exhausted his first round
of Texas State and U.S. Federal appeals, the State of Texas set Mr.
Clark to be executed on November 21, 2002. Mr. Clark had been
sentenced to death for the June 7, 1993 capital murder of 17-year
old Shari Catherine "Cari" Keeler Crews in Denton County, Texas.
Jesus Gilberto Garza, 16 years old, was killed along with Miss Crews.
Mr. Clark's co-defendant James Richard Brown was tried for the
capital murder of Mr. Garza, but was instead found guilty of robbery.
NOTE: James Brown wasn't convicted of aggravated
robbery, but simple robbery. Even though Miss Crews and Mr. Garza
were murdered, the jury felt that Mr. Brown had not caused anyone
serious bodily injury, nor had Mr. Brown used or exhibited a deadly
weapon. However, in 2002 there was evidence that Mr. Clark is
mentally retarded. Under U.S. Supreme Court decision Atkins v.
Virginia the mentally retarded are ineligible for execution, and on
November 18, 2002 the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed that
execution date, also ordering the original trial court to determine
whether Mr. Clark was in fact mentally retarded.
An application for Executive Clemency was filed
on October 31, 2002. However, it was rendered mute when the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals issued it's stay on November 18, 2002.
A three day evidentiary hearing was held and on
November 20, 2003 Lee Gabriel found that Mr. Clark is not retarded.
[See Judge Gabriel's Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law] On
March 3, 2004 the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Judge
Gabriel. [See Ex Parte James Lee Clark, WR-37,288-02.] Another
execution date was set for April 27, 2004.
Another application for Executive Clemency was
filed on April 6, 2004 to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. It
was unanimously denied on April 23, 2004.
On April 23, 2004 the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the 5th Circuit stayed Mr. Clark's April 27th execution date because
there was sufficient evidence that the State of Texas may have
misapplied Atkins v. Virginia. The U.S. Court of Appeals ordered the
U.S. District Court to determine whether Lee Gabriel and the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals were correct to deny Mr. Clark's claim of
mental retardation.
On January 20, 2005, without having an
evidentiary hearing, the U.S. District Judge David Folsom denied Mr.
Clark his claim of mental retardation. [See Memorandum Opinion, Case
No. 5:04cv124] On February 4, 2005 James Clark's attorney filed a
Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment. On February 16, 2005 that Motion
to Alter was denied. However, on March 16, 2005 the U.S. District
Judge Folsom did grant Mr. Clark permission to appeal his claim of
mental retardation to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit. [See Order Granting Application for Certificate of
Appealability.]
On July 20, 2006 the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit affirmed the ruling of the U.S. District Court and
ultimately Texas District Judge Lee Gabriel. [See James Lee Clark v.
Nathaniel Quarterman, Case No. 05-70008.] On August 2, 2006 James
Clark's attorney filed a Petition for Rehearing En Banc, which was
denied on August 29, 2006. Thus, and once again, Mr. Clark's claim
of mental retardation was denied in spite of the fact that the only
two psychologocial experts who thoroughly tested James Lee Clark
found him mentally retarded.
On November 21, 2006 James Clark's attorney filed
a Petition for Writ of Certiorari with the Supreme Court of the
United States. On February 26, 2007 the Supreme Court denied James
Clark's Petition for Writ of Certiorari. On February 28, 2007 Texas
District Judge Lee Gabriel signed an Order setting April 11, 2007
for James Clark's execution.
OVERVIEW
In spite of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in
Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002), which outlawed the
execution of the mentally retarded, Texas appears determined to
execute a mentally retarded man. Two different and independent
psychological experts on mental retardation thoroughly tested Mr.
Clark -- the only two experts who have thoroughly examined Mr. Clark
-- and each diagnosed him as mentally retarded.
In April of 2003 Dr. George Denkowski diagnosed
James Clark as mentally retarded, a person with a 65 IQ and three
adaptive behavior deficits. In July of 2003 Dr. Denis Keyes
diagnosed James Clark mentally retarded, a person with a 68 IQ and
several adaptive behavior deficits. [All psychological reports on
James Clark are available on the link to the left entitled "Expert
Psychologist Reports".] A person with mental retardation is
traditionally a person with an IQ of 70 or below with two or more
adaptive behavior deficits.
Per the U.S. Supreme Court Atkins decision, it is
illegal to execute Mr. Clark. He's mentally retarded. But this is
Texas. For example, Texas didn’t let the slaves know they were free
until almost 3 months after the U.S. Civil War ended. And then it
wasn't really Texas that notified the slaves of their freedom. It
was the Union soldiers who arrived in Galveston about three months
after Robert E. Lee surrendered.
Similarly, it's been almost five years and the
Texas Legislature still has not yet enacted laws to enforce the June,
2002 mandate from Atkins v. Virginia. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals took it upon itself to create law "during this legislative
interregnum to provide the bench and bar with temporary judicial
guidelines in addressing Atkins claims." [See Ex Parte Briseno, Feb.
11, 2004.]
James Clark was set to be executed on November
21, 2002, and on November 15th his attorneys filed an appeal under
Atkins v. Virginia, presenting evidence that James Clark is mentally
retarded. In 1983, when James Clark was 15 years old and in custody
of the Texas Youth Council Child Care System, James Clark was given
a psychologist evaluation by psychologist Dick Clark and was
diagnosed with an IQ of 74. [See Nov. 1983 Texas Youth Council Child
Care System Psychological Assessment.]
NOTE: taking into consideration the Standard
Error Measurement in IQ testing and the Flynn Effect (a recognized
IQ inflation factor), James Clark's true IQ at age 15 was surely
below 70.
On November 18, 2002 the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals agreed that this Atkins claim should at least be
investigated. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals issuesd a stay and
ordered the original trial court in Denton, Texas to determine
whether Clark is in fact mentally retarded. [See Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals Nov. 18, 2002 Order.]
A three-day evidentiary hearing was held. [The
full hearing transcript is available on the link to the left
entitled "James Clark's Atkins Hearing".]
In preparation for this court ordered hearing,
the Denton County, Texas District Attorney's Office hired Dr. George
Denkowski, a leading Texas State licensed psychologist on mental
retardation, to examine James Clark. Using the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III) and other tests, Dr. Denkowski
performed a 6-hour examination. WAIS-III is the most widely used
individually administered IQ test for adults. Dr. Denkowski found
that James Clark has an IQ of 65. Dr. Denkowski used the Adaptive
Behavior Assessment System (ABAS) to find that James Clark has three
adaptive behavior deficits. Dr. Denkowski also tested to make sure
that James Clark wasn't faking dumb, or malingering. [See Dr.
Denkowski's Forensic Psychological Evaluations Report on James
Clark.]
A 65 IQ with 3 adaptive behavior deficits plainly
meets the Texas statutory defintion of a person with mental
retardation. [See Texas Persons with Mental Retardation Act (Chapter
591 of the Texas Health & Safety Act).] In brief and general terms,
a person with mental retardation means anyone diagnosed by a
licensed physician or psychologist as having a 70 IQ or less,
concurrent with two or more adaptive behavior deficits, onset before
age 18.
But Dr. Denkowski's diagnosis that James Clark is
mentally retarded and therefore exempt from execution is not what
the Denton County District Attorney Bruce Isaacks wanted to hear.
Dr. Denkowski was fired and a second “expert” was hired in his
place, Dr. Thomas Allen. NOTE: Bruce Isaacks was voted out of office
in 2006. The current Denton County District Attorney is Paul Johnson.
SPECIAL NOTE: Paul Johnson's main campaign promise was to bring
integrity back to the Denton County District Attorney's Office.
Denton County Assistant District Attorney Vicki
Foster’s own words about Dr. Allen are apropos: “we hired another
doctor, who I'm sure you can anticipate is going to testify that
[James Clark’s] not mentally retarded”. [Ex Parte James Clark,
Atkins hearing, Vol. 2, pg. 201, lines 7-9.] Interestingly, Dr.
Allen considered himself nothing more than a consultant: “Basically
they hired me to consult with them.” [Ex Parte James Clark, Atkins
hearing, Vol. 3, pg. 13, line 3.]
And consult is pretty much all that Thomas Allen
did. He didn’t perform a thorough standardized examination of James
Clark to make his diagnosis. He read some background information,
including James Clark's 1983 psychological examination, then in May
of 2003 he chatted with James Clark for a couple of hours. From this
Thomas Allen reported that James Clark is not mentally retarded
after all. [See Thomas Allen's Forensic Psychological Consulation.]
NOTE: Thomas Allen himself used the term "Forensic Psychological
Consultation".
Next James Clark’s attorneys hired an expert
psychologist on mental retardation of their own, Dr. Denis Keyes,
who just as Dr. Denkowski, performed a thorough standardized
examination of James Clark. Dr. Keyes administered the Kaufman
Adolescent & Adult Intelligence Test, the Vineland Adaptive Behavior
Scale and other tests. This examination was done in two parts,
lasting a total of 7.5 hours. And again, consistent with Dr.
Denkowski, Dr. Keyes diagnosed James Clark mentally retarded: an IQ
of 68 with several adaptive behavior deficits. [See Dr. Keyes
Psychoeducational Report.]
Two psychologists experts on mental retardation
thoroughly and comprehensively test James Lee Clark, and both
experts diagnose James Clark mentally retarded. A "consultant" chats
with James Clark for a couple of hours and says Mr. Clark's not
mentally retarded. Even though Dr. Denkowski was fired by the Denton
County District Attorney's Office, his diagnosis of James Clark was
entered into the record. Dr. Denkowski was called to testify on
James Clark's behalf during the hearing.
To further counter the diagnoses of Dr. Denkowski
and Dr. Keyes, the Denton County District Attorney’s Office
introduced a series of anecdotal and incidental evidence. For
example, James Clark paid his rent (or often his ex-wife paid it for
him), did chores in return for rent reduction and could play a card
game similar to UNO, therefore he must not be mentally retarded.
Even though this evidence is not compelling at
all, the trial court and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals gave it
weight in spite of the fact that it was given by a woman who readily
admitted that she has memory problems. [Ex Parte James Clark, Atkins
hearing, Vol. 3, pg. 184, lines 13-23.] Similarly, other untrained
laypeople also provided anecdotal and incidental testimony, which
was given inappropriate weight by Judge Gabriel and the Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals.
Sec. 591.003(16) of the Texas Persons With Mental
Retardation Act expressly provides a " 'Person with mental
retardation' means a person determined by a physician or
psychologist licensed in this state or certified by the department
to have subaverage general intellectual functioning with deficits in
adaptive behavior." That is, only a licensed physician or
psychologist may determine who's mentally retarded. Anecdotal
information, or the opinions of untrained laypeople is not
meaningful.
The trial court's official Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law is available at the link on the left entitled
"Finds of Fact and Conclusions of Law". That link also contains a
more detailed analysis than presented here.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals decision in
James Clark's Atkins appeal, formally styled Ex Parte James Lee
Clark, is available at the link on the left entitled "Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals Decision". That link also contains a more detailed
analysis than presented here on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
decision in James Clark's case.
The Denton County District Attorney’s Office also
entered into evidence an inventory of Mr. Clark’s property from his
Texas Death Row prison cell. Mr. Clark had a copy of the books Lord
Jim and A Tale of Two Cities, a newspaper clipping about the Atkins
decision, various crossword puzzles, letters from people overseas,
36 magazines, etc., therefore, reasoned the Denton County District
Attorney, James Clark must not be mentally retarded.
First, it's wrong to think that mental
retardation is a function of the types of property a person owns.
Just as it would be wrong to think: this person is well dressed,
therefore he or she can't be mentally retarded; or, this person is
good looking, therefore he or she can't be mentally retarded. Second,
the trial court and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused to
consider Mr. Clark's living environment. He lives on Texas Death Row.
He is locked alone in a prison cell 23 hours a day. Under normal
circumstances he is only allowed out of his cell for one hour a day,
and even then handcuffed and under close prison guard escort, to
either bathe or enter his cell block's recreation area. He is only
allowed to use the telephone with his attorney, and then only when
his attorney initiates the call.
Rightfully, Mr. Clark doesn't have the freedom to
go to his local WAL-MART to buy the things he likes. Similarly, Mr.
Clark doesn't have the freedom to go to the his local convenience
store to buy newspapers or magazines. Separately, but just as
important, Mr. Clark doesn't have any money of his own. Everything
Mr. Clark has in his prison cell was either given to him by the
prison, or was a gift in some way, shape or form from a friend,
family member or charitable well-wisher.
Plain and simple, the books Lord Jim and A Tale
of Two Cities were a gift from a friend. James Clark didn't ask for
those books. He didn't know anything about them until he received
them in the mail. These books were Amazon.com order
#002-7414259-2434446, ordered on September 19, 2002. James Clark
didn't place that order; he has no access to the Internet from Texas
Death Row.
The trial court and the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals didn't care that prison records showed that James Clark
never checked a book out of the general prison library. He had
checked a few things out of the prison law library, but nothing out
of the prison general library. James Clark had no interest in
general reading. His interest is picture magazines. He had 36
magazines in his cell, but the trial court and the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals didn't care, nor did they explain, that the
magazines were mostly pictures of cars, motorcycles and girls.
The newspaper clipping was also a gift from a
friend. The letters from overseas were from well-meaning anti-death
penalty activists worldwide. Also, the trial court and the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals didn’t explain that none of the crossword
puzzles were completed and most of the crossword puzzles inventoried
from Mr. Clark’s Death Row Prison cell had the answer sheets
attached to them. [Ex Parte James Clark, Atkins hearing, Vol. 4, pg.
19, line 14 to pg. 20, line 6.]
Also, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals didn’t
mention that the Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) employee who
testified to authenticate James Clark’s property inventory
subsequently committed Violations of The Civil Rights of Person in
Custody: "engages in sexual contact, sexual intercourse, or deviate
sexual intercourse with an individual in custody". [See Texas Penal
Code § 39.04(a)(2).]
This employee's criminal acts were unrelated to
James Clark, but this employee's moral turpitude goes to show a
complete absence of integrity and complete lack of credibility.
There are also multiple allegations that she stole property from
Texas Death Row prisoners.
Of special note, during the whole three-day
hearing, James Clark was handcuffed, shackled and forced to wear a
stun belt. There's broad consensus that stun belts should never be
used on anyone, nevertheless on someone who is mentally retarded.
Stun belts shock a person with 50,000 volts of electricity for 8
seconds. "The shock contains enough amperage to immobilize a person
temporarily and cause muscular weakness for approximately 30 to 45
minutes. The wearer is generally knocked to the ground and shakes
uncontrollably. Activation may also cause immediate and uncontrolled
defecation and urination, and the belt’s metal prongs may leave
welts on the wearer’s skin requiring as long as six months to heal.
An electrical jolt of this magnitude causes temporary debilitating
pain and may cause some wearers to suffer heartbeat irregularities
or seizures." [People v. Mar, 28 Cal. 4th 1201 (2002).]
But Judge Gabriel didn't care. When James Clark's
attorney asked that the stun belt be removed from Mr. Clark, Judge
Gabriel simply said, "That's not my decision to make. " [Ex Parte
James Clark, Atkins hearing, Vol. 3, Pg. 9, Ln. 2.] She wanted to
leave the decision as to whether James Clark should be forced to
wear a stun belt, even though he was already handcuffed and shackled,
to the then Denton County Sheriff Weldon Lucas.
NOTE: Weldon Lucas left office as of January 1,
2005. Similar to the election campaign against former Denton County
District Attorney Bruce Isaacks, the main campaign promise of
current Denton County Sheriff Bennie Parkey was to bring integrity
back to the Denton County Sheriff's Office.
However, and although local indictments for
bribery, aggravated perjury and abuse of official capacity against
Weldon Lucas have been dropped, media reports provide that Lucas is
still being investigated by the FBI. He is being accused of taking
kickbacks from private vendors, lying about it under oath and having
jailees work to help rebuild the church to which he has been a
longtime member. [Dallas Morning News newspaper report posted to
www.dentonrc.com, 09:11 PM CST on Monday, March 29, 2004.]
The church work may appear charitable, or at
least harmless, but it is illegal for private interests (such as
Sheriff Lucas's church) to benefit from free jail labor. Jail labor
is restricted to approved county government projects. And this is
the sort of man that Judge Gabriel wanted, someone being accused of
repeated acts of official misconduct, to decide whether James Clark
should be forced to wear a stun belt in court. Judge Gabriel
effectively wanted this type of man to decide when and when not to
activate a stun belt upon a handcuffed, shackled and mentally
retarded man.
Amazingly, on March 3, 2004 the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals accepted Judge Lee Gabriel's finding in an 8-1
ruling. For the purpose of the death penalty, James Lee Clark isn't
mentally retarded, so says the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and
the Great State of Texas.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals' full written
opinion in James Clark's case is available on the link to the left
entitled "Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Decision". The Briseno
opinion, the first opinion the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals gave
on an Atkins claim, is also available on that link.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals didn't care
that a person with a 65 IQ and three adaptive behavior deficits
would otherwise be classified as mentally retarded. Instead, the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that “[a]lthough experts may
offer insightful opinions on the question of whether a particular
person meets the psychological diagnostic criteria for mental
retardation, the ultimate issue of whether this person is, in fact,
mentally retarded for purposes of the Eighth Amendment ban on
excessive punishment is one for the finder of fact, based upon all
of the evidence and determinations of credibility.”
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in effect
told every trial judge and every jury in Texas that it's perfectly
OK to ignore expert psychological diagnosis in death penalty cases
involving mental retardation. In criminal cases in Texas it is
either the trial judge or the trial jury that is the "finder of
fact". However, in capital cases in which the prosecution is seeking
the death penalty, then only the jury may be the "finder of fact".
But Texas' legal treatment of James Clark becomes
all the more reprehensible when compared to the Texas legal
treatment of former Texas Death Row inmate Robert Smith.
There was evidence that Robert Smith is mentally
retarded, so the Harris County presiding trial court convened a
hearing to determine whether Robert Smith is in fact mentally
retarded. Harris County District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal hired a
psychological expert, interestingly it was Dr. George Denkowski, and
the defense hired their own psychological expert, Dr. Jerome Brown.
[A more detailed analysis than presented here is available on the
link to the left entitled "Comparison with Former Texas Death Row
Inmate Robert Smith's Case".]
Dr. Denkowki and Dr. Brown thoroughly examined Mr.
Smith, and each expert diagnosed Robert Smith as mentally retarded,
concurring that Smith has a 63 IQ with two or more adaptive behavior
deficits. Dr. Brown used the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III)
to determine Robert Smith's IQ. The exact same test that Dr.
Denkowski used to determine James Clark's IQ, and even though Dr.
Denkowski himself didn't perform the WAIS-III on Robert Smith, he
concurred with the results after a thorough examination of his own.
Dr. Denkowski didn't just chat with Robert Smith for a couple of
hours.
Amazingly, all of the government officials
involved with Robert Smith's case called for and got an immediate
commutation of Mr. Smith's death sentence to life in prison: the
prosecutor, the judge, the unanimous membership of the Texas Board
of Pardons and Paroles and the Texas Governor. Dr. Denkowski's
diagnosis of Robert Smith was given complete credence, if not total
deference. And Harris County District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal, the
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, and Texas Governor Rick Perry
have no reputation for kindness or mercy when it comes to the death
penalty.
But Denton County District Attorney Bruce Isaacs,
Denton County District Judge Lee Gabriel and 8 of the 9 members of
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals treated Dr. Denkowski's
diagnosis of James Clark as worthless. Robert Smith has a tested IQ
of 63 with two or more adaptive behavior deficits, and the State of
Texas rushed to commute his death sentence to life in prison. James
Clark has a tested IQ of 65 with two or more adaptive behavior
deficits, and the State of Texas is rushing to have him executed.
*****
On March 10, 2004 Judge Lee Gabriel signed a
court order setting Mr. Clark's execution for April 27, 2004. On
April 23, 2004 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit stayed
Mr. Clark's April 27th execution date because there was sufficient
evidence that the State of Texas may have misapplied the law. The
U.S. Court of Appeals ordered the U.S. District Court to determine
whether Texas's denial of Mr. Clark's claim of mental retardation
was correct.
On January 20, 2005, without having an
evidentiary hearing, the U.S. District Judge David Folsom denied Mr.
Clark his claim of mental retardation. [See Memorandum Opinion, Case
No. 5:04cv124] On February 4, 2005 James Clark's attorney filed a
Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment. On February 16, 2005 that Motion
to Alter was denied. However, on March 16, 2005 the U.S. District
Judge Folsom did grant Mr. Clark permission to appeal his claim of
mental retardation to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit. [See Order Granting Application for Certificate of
Appealability.]
On July 20, 2006 the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit affirmed the ruling of the U.S. District Court and
ultimately Texas District Judge Lee Gabriel. [See James Lee Clark v.
Nathaniel Quarterman, Case No. 05-70008.] On August 2, 2006 James
Clark's attorney filed a Petition for Rehearing En Banc, which was
denied on August 29, 2006. Thus, and once again, Mr. Clark's claim
of mental retardation was denied in spite of the fact that the only
two psychologocial experts who thoroughly tested James Lee Clark
found him mentally retarded.
On February 26, 2007 the Supreme Court of the
United States denied James Clark's Petition for Writ of Certiorari.
On February 28, 2007 Texas District Judge Lee Gabriel signed an
Order setting April 11, 2007 for James Clark's execution.
*****
In brief summary, Texas has a statutory
definition of mental retardation. Also, the American Association on
Mental Retardation has an accepted standard clinical definition of
mental retardation. The 2002 American Association on Mental
Retardation's definition of mental retardation was cited by the U.S.
Supreme Court in Atkins v. Virginia, and it has clinical national
consensus. Note, Texas's statutory definition for mental retardation
was written in 1991, amended in 1993, to be used within the realm of
public health. The State of Texas has not yet passed specific
legislation to address the requirements of U.S. Supreme Court
decision Atkins v. Virginia.
The Texas statutory definition of mental
retardation is contained in the Texas Health and Safety Code. It is
specifically called the Persons with Mental Retardation Act.
§591.003(1) - "Adaptive behavior" means the effectiveness with or
degree to which a person meets the standards of personal
independence and social responsibility expected of the person's age
and cultural group. §591.003(13) - “Mental retardation" means
significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning that is
concurrent with deficits in adaptive behavior and originates during
the developmental period. §591.003(16) - "Person with mental
retardation" means a person determined by a physician or
psychologist licensed in this state or certified by the [Texas Dept.
of Mental Health and Mental Retardation] to have subaverage general
intellectual functioning with deficits in adaptive behavior.
§591.003(20) - "Subaverage general intellectual functioning" refers
to measured intelligence on standardized psychometric instruments of
two or more standard deviations below the age-group mean for the
tests used.
The American Association on Mental Retardation’s
1992 definition of mental retardation is mentioned in Atkins v.
Virginia: “Mental retardation refers to substantial limitations in
present functioning. It is characterized by significantly subaverage
intellectual functioning, existing concurrently with related
limitations in two or more of the following applicable adaptive
skill areas: communication, self-care, home living, social skills,
community use, self-direction, health and safety, functional
academics, leisure, and work. Mental retardation manifests before
age 18."
However, in 2002 the American Association on
Mental Retardation refined and enhanced their definition: “Mental
retardation is a disability characterized by significant limitations
both in intellectual functioning and in adaptive behavior as
expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills. This
disability originates before age 18.” Coupled with this definition
are “Five Assumptions Essential to the Application of the Definition:
1) Limitations in present functioning must be considered within the
context of community environments typical of the individual's age
peers and culture; 2) Valid assessment considers cultural and
linguistic diversity as well as differences in communication,
sensory, motor, and behavioral factors; 3) Within an individual,
limitations often coexist with strengths; 4) An important purpose of
describing limitations is to develop a profile of needed supports;
5) With appropriate personalized supports over a sustained period,
the life functioning of the person with mental retardation generally
will improve.”
*****
Even though trial judge Lee Gabriel and an 8-1
majority of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals used the Texas
Persons with Mental Retardation Act to define mental retardation in
James Clark's case, they conveniently ignored §591.003(16) of that
Act, the very definition of a "person with mental retardation".
And the reason is that James Clark satisfies the
statutory definition of a "person with mental retardation". That
definition is "a person determined by a physician or psychologist
licensed in this state or certified by the [Texas Dept. of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation] to have subaverage general
intellectual functioning with deficits in adaptive behavior."
Dr. George Denkowski is a licensed psychologist
in Texas. Dr. Denkowski determined by thorough standardized
examination that James Clark has subaverage general intellectual
functioning with deficits in adaptive behavior. Thus, by Texas law
James Clark is a "person with mental retardation".
Judge Lee Gabriel and the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals can't pick and choose what parts of the Texas Persons with
Mental Retardation Act that they want to use and what parts of the
Texas Persons with Mental Retardation Act that they want to ignore.
That's called a violation of due process and a denial of equal
protection under the law.
*****
Separately, but just as importantly, James Clark
has other important issues. There is, briefly,
A Wiggins Claim: In Wiggins v. Smith (2003) the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled that during the penalty phase of a capital
trial the defendant's legal counsel must perform a reasonably
thorough investigation before deciding a defense strategy. Anything
less is an unconstitutional deprivation of the right to effective
assistance of counsel.
In James Clark's original trial his defense
attorneys -- Richard Podgorski and Henry Paine -- made no opening
arguments, called no witnesses for the guilt-innocence or for the
punishment phases of the trial. During their investigation of James
Clark's background there's no evidence that either Podgorski or
Paine tried to contact James Clark's mother, his brothers, his
stepfather, any of his elementary school teachers or his middle
school teachers, etc. [A more detailed analysis than presented here
is available on the link to the left entitled "Claim Under Wiggins
v. Smith, 2003".]
Texas is Set to Execute a Mentally Retarded Man
On April 11, 2007. U.S. Supreme Court Atkins Decision be Damned.
*****
Two Applications for Executive Clemency have been
filed in James Clark's behalf. One was filed on October 31, 2002,
with a November 5, 2002 supplement. This was when James Clark had a
November 21, 2002 execution date. The other was filed on April 6,
2004, with an April 12, 2004 supplement. This is for his April 27,
2004 execution date. All documents are PDFs.
*****
October 31, 2002: This Application examines the
problems with James Clark's original trial -- the inadequate legal
representation he received at trial, the judicial indiscretion and
the prosecutorial duplicity. This application also examines the
meaning of Clemency. This PDF is approximately 1.7 Mbytes.
November 5, 2002: This supplement presents
evidence that James Clark may be mentally retarded. This PDF is
approximately 175 Kbytes.
*****
April 6, 2004: This application compares James
Clark's Atkins hearing with Robert Smith's Atkins proceedings.
Robert Smith was diagnosed as mentally retarded, a 63 IQ with 5
adaptive behavior deficits, and his death sentence was commuted to
life. James Clark was diagnosed as mentally retarded, a 65 IQ with
three adaptive behavior deficits, and he is scheduled to be executed
on April 27, 2004. This PDF is approximately 275 Kbytes.
April 12, 2004: This supplement explains that
James Clark has not yet presented a claim of ineffective assistance
of counsel under U.S. Supreme Court case Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S.
510 (2003). This PDF is approximately 175 Kbytes.
*****
March 21, 2007: This application examines the
means and manner in which Texas deprived James Lee Clark of legal
fairness on his mental retardation claim. The Texas courts were
wrong:
-to have allowed the Denton County District
Attorney to hire and fire psychological experts on mental
retardation until he found one who would give him the testimony he
wanted to hear.
-to overrule the only two psychological experts
who performed relevant and reliable diagnosis. Each swear that James
Clark is mentally retarded. Instead Texas took the opinion of a
psychologist who simply chatted with James Clark for 2 hours and 16
minutes.
-to use faulty science. The standard error of
measurement and the Flynn Effect must be considered in IQ testing.
not to have waited for The People, via the Texas Legislature, to
enact law in compliance with Atkins v. Virginia.
ProDeathPenalty.com
In the early morning of June 7, 1993, James Lee
Clark and James Brown arrived at a Texaco store in Denton, Texas,
and asked the store clerk to call an ambulance for Brown who had
suffered a gunshot wound. Subsequent investigation revealed that
Brown accidentally shot himself in the leg at point blank range with
a shotgun while he and Clark were assaulting Shari Catherine "Cari"
Crews, 16 and Jesus Garza, 17, at Clear Creek.
Police recovered both bodies from the creek and
determined that Crews had been sexually assaulted by Clark, as
verified by DNA evidence, and then killed with a single shotgun
wound (a contact wound) to the back of the head. Garza also died
from a single shotgun wound, but it was to the left side of his chin
or jaw. Powder residue revealed a short muzzle-to-wound distance,
but it was not a contact wound. Police also recovered a 12 gauge
double barrel shotgun and a .22 caliber rifle from the crime scene.
Further investigation revealed that Clark and
Brown, both parolees, stole the shotgun and rifle in car burglaries
on June 4, 1993. The stock of the rifle had been shortened and
police found the sawed off portion while searching Clark's residence;
the stock of the shotgun was cracked. The search of Clark's
residence also produced tennis shoes splattered with the blood of
Brown, Crews, and Garza.
During interrogation, Clark stated that Brown
instigated the incident; shot himself while using the shotgun as a
bludgeon to strike Garza in the head; and, after suffering the
severe gunshot wound to the leg, shot and killed both victims. Brown
contended that Clark killed both victims. Clark was indicted on the
charge of capital murder arising out of the June 7, 1993, robbery,
sexual assault, and death of Crews. Clark was convicted of the
capital murder on April 29, 1994, and he was sentenced to death on
May 3, 1994.
UPDATE: Ten years after the murders of two high
school students, their killer is pretending to be mentally retarded
to avoid execution, prosecutors argued during a hearing in September
of 2003. But defense attorneys said the man, James Lee Clark, is
impaired and should be spared because the U.S. Supreme Court has
ruled that executing the mentally retarded is cruel and unusual.
State District Judge Lee Gabriel has about two months to rule on
whether Clark is mentally retarded. This hearing was a continuation
of one that began in August.
Clark was sentenced to death for killing
Catherine "Cari" Crews in 1993. Crews, 17, and a friend, 16-year-old
Jesus Gilberto Garza, were robbed and killed with a shotgun. Their
bodies were dumped in a creek north of Denton. Crews was sexually
assaulted. Clark was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to
die. An accomplice, James Richard Brown, was sentenced to 20 years
for robbery.
Assistant District Attorney Vicki Foster, who
tried Clark's original case, said Clark has changed his behavior. "This
isn't him. During the original trial, he participated, he made
wisecracks," she said. Clark was scheduled to die in November 2002,
but the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals issued a stay two days
before his execution.
The courts define mental retardation as having an
IQ below 70. Clark's IQ was 74 when he was sent to the Texas Youth
Commission after a juvenile conviction in 1983. Two other tests
showed Clark's IQ at 65 and 68. Thomas Allen, a psychologist for the
prosecution, said he believes Clark was deliberately getting answers
wrong on those tests. Clark reached the equivalent of the 12th grade
at the Gainesville State School, completed a GED and took a
community college welding class, testimony showed. George C.
Denkowski, a psychologist for the defense, questioned Allen's
findings.
Allen interviewed Clark for only two hours and 16
minutes and never performed any tests to prove whether Clark was
malingering, Denkowski said. Clark's cell on Death Row contained
copies of newspaper articles, crossword puzzles and two novels: A
Tale of Two Cities and Lord Jim. But none of the crosswords had been
completed, and his attorneys said outside the courtroom that he
never read the books.
A few members of Garza's family and a friend of
the Crews family were in the courtroom Monday. Clark sported horn-rimmed
glasses and a shaven head. He spent most of his time looking down at
the defense table. Occasionally, his head twitched, and he appeared
to mumble to himself.
UPDATE: In November of 2003, a judge ruled
that even if the man who killed a 17-year-old Denton high school
student 10 years ago is mildly retarded, he is not so impaired that
he can be exempted from the death penalty. James Lee Clark also
cannot be classified as mentally retarded because he fails to meet
the criteria of the definition set in the Texas Health and Safety
Code, 367th state District Judge Lee Gabriel states in her ruling.
The decision will now be reviewed by the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals. Attorneys for Clark had cited a U.S. Supreme Court ruling
that bars execution of the mentally retarded. That ruling came down
in June 2002, before Clark was to be executed in November 2002 for
killing Catherine "Cari" Crews, a Ryan High School student. The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Clark a stay of execution in
November 2002 after he and his attorneys invoked the Supreme Court
ruling. The bodies of Crews and 16-year-old Jesus Gilberto Garza, a
classmate and acquaintance, were found in a creek north of Denton
with shotgun wounds to the head. Both were robbed and shot the night
of June 7, 1993. Clark _ who had not previously claimed to be
mentally retarded _ was arrested in connection with the fatal
shootings while on parole after serving less than a year of a 10-year
term for burglary in Dallas County. An accomplice in the murders,
James Richard Brown, received a 20-year prison sentence for robbery.
Ex parte Clark, Not Reported in S.W.3d,
2004 WL 885583 (Tex.Cr.App. 2004) (State Habeas).
Background: After defendant was convicted of
capital murder and was sentenced to death, he petitioned for a writ
of habeas corpus. The trial court, Denton County, denied the
petition. Defendant appealed.
Holding: The Court of Criminal Appeals held that
defendant failed to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence,
that he was mentally retarded such that he was exempt from the death
penalty under Atkins v. Virginia. Writ relief denied.
PER CURIAM.
This is a subsequent application for writ of habeas corpus filed
pursuant to Article 11.071, § 5, of the Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure.
On May 3, 1994, a jury convicted applicant of
capital murder and, pursuant to its answers to the special
punishment issues, the trial court set punishment at death. This
Court affirmed applicant's conviction on direct appeal. Clark v.
State, No. 71,991 (Tex.Crim.App.1996) (not designated for
publication). Applicant filed his original application for writ of
habeas corpus on October 6, 1997. We denied relief-as did the
federal courts.
Ten days before his scheduled execution on
November 21, 2002, applicant filed a subsequent application raising
seven different claims. We reviewed the application and found that
the first allegation, an Atkins claim of mental retardation,
satisfied the requirements of Section 5 of Article 11.071. The
remaining allegations did not satisfy Section 5 and were dismissed
as an abuse of the writ. We granted applicant's request for a stay
of execution, and remanded his mental retardation claim to the trial
court for further proceedings.
In Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 122 S.Ct.
2242, 153 L.Ed.2d 335 (2002), the Supreme Court announced that there
is a national consensus that those who suffer from mental
retardation should be exempt from the death penalty. However, the
Court simultaneously left to the individual states the substantive
and procedural mechanisms to implement that decision. Id. at 317.
The Supreme Court also noted that “not all people who claim to be
mentally retarded will be so impaired as to fall within the range of
mentally retarded offenders about whom there is a national consensus.”
Id.
In Ex parte Briseno, --- S.W.3d ----, 2004
Tex.Crim.App. LEXIS 199 (Tex.Crim.App.2004), this Court set out the
substantive definitions and procedural mechanisms that apply to
Atkins claims raised in post-conviction writs of habeas corpus. In
Briseno, noting the absence of a statutory definition of mental
retardation for purposes of Atkins, we adopted: the definitions of
“mental retardation” set out by the American Association on Mental
Retardation (AAMR), and that contained in section 591.003(13) of the
Texas Health and Safety Code. Under the AAMR definition, mental
retardation is a disability characterized by: (1) “significantly
subaverage” general intellectual functioning; (2) accompanied by
“related” limitations in adaptive functioning; (3) the onset of
which occurs prior to the age of 18.... [T]he definition under the
Texas Health and Safety Code is similar: “ ‘mental retardation’
means significantly subaverage intellectual functioning that is
concurrent with deficits in adaptive behavior and originates during
the developmental period.” Briseno, --- S.W.3d at ----, 2004 LEXIS.
These are the same definitions that the trial court used in
assessing applicant's evidence of mental retardation.
The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing
over several days to permit both applicant and the State an
opportunity to introduce all pertinent testimony, records, and other
materials on the issue of mental retardation. Based upon that
evidence, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions
of law recommending that we deny relief.
The trial court noted that applicant had IQ test
scores both above and below 70. In November 1983, when applicant was
fifteen-and-a-half and in the custody of the Texas Youth Commission
(TYC), his full scale IQ, measured by the Wechsler Intelligence
Scale for Children-Revised, was 74, with the verbal component at 74
and the performance component at 78.
This IQ score was considered reliable by both the
defense and State's experts at the Atkins hearing. However, the
psychologist who conducted applicant's TYC psychological assessment
in 1983 noted that these results might be low because of applicant's
minimal efforts during the test.
He stated that “the student's intellectual
potential is projected to fall somewhere between the dull average
and average ranges, based on the student's performance on certain
subtests involving higher intellectual processes, i.e., analytical
reasoning and ideational planning.” This psychologist also stated
that applicant “demonstrates a fair potential for dealing with
verbal abstractions, and has a decent working fund of general
information in view of his background and academic difficulties.”
In his achievement tests, applicant's reading
ability scored at the 9.6 grade level, spelling at 8.5, and math at
5.6, which was noted as “only slightly below grade norms for his age
group.” The psychologist attributed applicant's placement in “the
special assignment class” in middle school to truancy and negative
behavior. Applicant told this psychologist that he smoked marijuana
approximately three to five times a week and bought beer three to
four times weekly.
His mother told TYC officials that applicant
“steals from everyone” and “has no friends in school ... because he
steals from them all.” According to his TYC caseworker, applicant
“is an extremely angry student and will attempt to play ‘dumb.’ “ In
1983, applicant was diagnosed as having “conduct disorder,
associated with psychological deprivation, coupled with features of
immature personality.”
After his writ application was remanded to the
trial court, applicant was given two more IQ tests in April and June
of 2003. On these tests, applicant scored considerably lower. On the
April test, his full score IQ measured at 65, with a verbal
component of 74 and a performance component of 60. The June test was
consistent with that in April. The trial court noted that “within a
prison population, it is highly unusual to have a verbal IQ higher
than the performance IQ. This pattern is more common in individuals
with a higher education.”
The trial court noted that it is possible for a
motivated testee to manipulate scores to make them lower by
deliberately missing questions. Thus, it concluded that applicant's
test scores taken before the age of eighteen and before he had been
convicted of capital murder more accurately reflected applicant's
IQ.
The trial court also compared the evidence
submitted by both the applicant and the State regarding adaptive
behavior during the developmental period. The court noted that
applicant completed the 11th grade in TYC and that, between 1983 and
1986, his grades steadily improved. Applicant obtained a GED in 1985
and completed a welding class at Cooke County College that same year.
He was successfully employed in several different departments at the
Gainesville State School and had positive reports from his
supervisors. The trial court concluded that the TYC records showed
that applicant adapted to, and succeeded in, his environment and he
“was able to learn information sufficient to obtain adequate grades
in school, to develop job skills, and to interact socially.”
Applicant committed the present offense on June
7, 1993, when he was 25 years old. Although the trial court's
findings did not discuss any of the circumstances of the offense to
determine whether commission of the crime showed careful planning,
complex execution of purpose, or analytical sophistication, this
Court noted in its opinion on direct appeal that: the evidence
presented showed a calculated plan consummated with forethought and
deliberateness. [Applicant] planned days in advance to carry out
some sort of criminal scheme; he systematically broke into vehicles
securing weapons and other paraphernalia and then went to at least
two different stores in search of ammunition for those weapons.
Clark v. State, No. 71,911, slip op. at 5.
The habeas trial court considered evidence of
applicant's general level of adaptive skills at and near the time of
the offense. Applicant lived in a mobile home park, paid rent, did
chores for the trailer park owners in return for a rent reduction,
played cards once or twice a week with the owners, went to the
library, worked on his ex-wife's car, drove his own car, and obeyed
the rules of the trailer park. After the murders, the investigating
Texas Ranger had no problem communicating with applicant who was
responsive to the specific questions. According to the trial court's
findings, “[w]hen Applicant was confronted with inconsistencies,
Applicant changed his response and transitioned rapidly into
developing a new story” and he “could react quickly on his feet.”
The habeas court also noted that a deputy sheriff
who was assigned to applicant during the capital murder trial stated
that “Applicant was very focused during trial and wrote notes
constantly about what a witness said.” He was very active in
assisting his lawyers to choose the jury. He had been booked into
the Denton County Jail with a True Confessions magazine, a crossword
puzzle book, and a driver's license. Applicant made numerous
requests to use the law library during the six months preceding his
trial and filed a written complaint that a jailer's failure to give
him food after he had been returned late from the courthouse was a
“violation of my lawful right.”
The trial court noted that applicant kept and
maintained numerous items in his cell on Death Row, including the
books Lord Jim and Tale of Two Cities, a Houston Chronicle article
dated February 17, 2003, entitled “States Try to Define Mental
Retardation,” various crossword puzzles, correspondence from people
in other countries, a chess set, a typewriter, and 36 magazines. The
Death Row law librarian testified that applicant checked out
numerous court decisions, including two from the Supreme Court, and
that applicant requested several consultations with other inmates,
indicating that he could help another inmate do legal research and
write a brief to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit.
The trial court noted that two defense
psychologists testified that applicant had significant limitations
in adaptive skills, either currently or at the time of the capital
murder, but the trial court found that these assessments were
contrary to the evidence of applicant's actual behavior, either in
1993 or in 2003 when they tested and interviewed him. As we noted in
Briseno:
Although experts may offer insightful opinions on
the question of whether a particular person meets the psychological
diagnostic criteria for mental retardation, the ultimate issue of
whether this person is, in fact, mentally retarded for purposes of
the Eighth Amendment ban on excessive punishment is one for the
finder of fact, based upon all of the evidence and determinations of
credibility. --- S.W.3d at ----, 2004 Tex.Crim.App. LEXIS at *19-20.
Based upon the testimony and materials submitted
at the evidentiary hearing, the trial court found that applicant did
not have “significant limitations in the adaptive skill areas of
communication, self-care, home living, social skills, community use,
self-direction, health and safety, functional academics, leisure, or
work.”
This Court has reviewed the record. The findings
of fact and conclusions of law made by the trial court are supported
by the record. Applicant has failed to show, by a preponderance of
the evidence, that he is mentally retarded such that he is exempt
from the death penalty under Atkins v. Virginia. Therefore, we deny
relief. IT IS SO ORDERED THIS THE 3rd DAY OF MARCH, 2004.
HOLCOMB, J., dissents with note. I respectfully
dissent for the reasons expressed in my dissent in Ex parte Briseno.
Clark v. Johnson, 227 F.3d 273 (5th
Cir. 2000) (Federal Habeas).
Following affirmance of capital murder conviction
and death sentence, petition for writ of habeas corpus was filed.
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas,
Howell Cobb, J., denied petition. Petitioner requested certificate
of appealability (COA). The Court of Appeals, Dennis, Circuit Judge,
held that: (1) petitioner failed to establish Brady violation; (2)
state court's findings were sufficient to support death sentence;
(3) Teague doctrine barred adoption of new rule; and (4) petitioner
was not denied effective assistance of counsel. Request denied.
DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
Texas death row inmate James Lee Clark requests that we grant a
certificate of appealability as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)
before an appeal may be taken from the district court's denial of
habeas relief. We deny Clark's request.
I. FACTS and PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In the early morning of June 7, 1993, James Lee
Clark and James Brown arrived at a Texaco store in Denton, Texas,
and asked the store clerk to call an ambulance for Brown who had
suffered a gunshot wound. Subsequent investigation revealed that
Brown accidentally shot himself in the leg at point blank range with
a shotgun while he and Clark were assaulting Shari Catherine “Cari”
Crews (16 years old) and Jesus Garza (17 years old) at Clear Creek.
Police recovered both bodies from the creek and determined that
Crews had been sexually assaulted by Clark, as verified by DNA
evidence, and then killed with a single shotgun wound (a contact
wound) to the back of the head. Garza also died from a single
shotgun wound, but it was to the left side of his chin or jaw.
Powder residue revealed a short muzzle-to-wound distance, but it was
not a contact wound. Police also recovered a 12 gauge double barrel
shotgun and a .22 caliber rifle from the crime scene.
Further investigation revealed that Clark and
Brown, both parolees, stole the shotgun and rifle in car burglaries
on June 4, 1993. The stock of the rifle had been shortened and
police found the sawed off portion while searching Clark's
residence; the stock of the shotgun was cracked. The search of
Clark's residence also produced tennis shoes splattered with the
blood of Brown, Crews, and Garza. During interrogation, Clark stated
that Brown instigated the incident; shot himself while using the
shotgun as a bludgeon to strike Garza in the head; and, after
suffering the severe gunshot wound to the leg, shot and killed both
victims. Brown contended that Clark killed both victims.
Clark was indicted on the charge of capital
murder arising out of the June 7, 1993, robbery, sexual assault, and
death of Crews. Clark was convicted of the capital murder on April
29, 1994, and he was sentenced to death on May 3, 1994. The
conviction and sentence were affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals on October 2, 1996.
On October 15, 1996, Clark's trial attorneys
informed him that they would no longer represent him, and on the
following day Clark filed a pro se motion for appointment of counsel
to pursue state habeas relief. Clark also filed a pro se motion on
October 18, 1996, for an extension of time to file a motion for
rehearing by the Court of Criminal Appeals. Although this motion was
granted and the time extended until November 11, 1996, no motion for
rehearing was filed.
The Court of Criminal Appeals appointed counsel
for Clark to pursue collateral proceedings on April 9, 1997. Clark
subsequently applied for a writ of habeas corpus in the trial court
on October 6, 1997, challenging the validity of his conviction and
sentence by asserting eleven grounds for relief. Without holding an
evidentiary hearing, the trial court entered findings of fact and
conclusions of law. The Court of Criminal Appeals reviewed the
record, adopted the trial court's findings and conclusions (with the
exception of finding of fact number ten, which it found unsupported
by the record), and denied habeas relief on July 8, 1998.
On July 27, 1998, Clark filed a petition for
habeas relief in the federal district court asserting five grounds
for relief: (1) the prosecutor suppressed exculpatory information;
(2) the petitioner received a disproportionate sentence given his
role in the crime; (3) the trial court's failure to instruct the
jury on the unavailability of parole during the initial thirty-five
years of a life sentence violated due process of law; (4) the
petitioner was denied effective assistance of counsel during direct
appeal; and (5) the petitioner was denied effective assistance of
counsel when his appointed counsel failed to present available
evidence during the punishment stage.
Without allowing for discovery or holding an
evidentiary hearing, and after conducting a de novo review of the
magistrate's report and overruling Clark's objections thereto, on
December 13, 1999, the district court adopted the magistrate's
conclusions of law and findings of fact, and denied the petition for
habeas corpus.
On January 12, 2000, Clark timely filed a notice
of appeal and simultaneously applied to the district court for a
certificate of appealability (COA) as required by 28 U.S.C. §
2253(c) to obtain review in this court of the denial of federal
habeas relief. Clark's application urged the same five arguments
that were rejected by the district court, and it also sought to
appeal the district court's refusal to permit discovery or to
conduct an evidentiary hearing regarding the first five claims for
relief. The district court denied COA as to all six claims on
January 28, 2000.
II. DISCUSSION
Clark seeks a COA from this court on five
constitutional issues: (1) the prosecution's violation of Clark's
right to due process of law by its failure to disclose to Clark's
trial counsel favorable, material evidence as required by Brady v.
Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963); (2) the
violation of Clark's Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be
free from cruel and unusual punishment resulting from the
prosecution's inconsistent argument in a subsequent related trial as
to the identity of the shooter and the state trial court's jury
instructions, which permitted a capital murder conviction and a
sentence of death without a finding that Clark was the actual killer,
had attempted to kill, or had intended that a human life be taken;
(3) the violation of Clark's due process rights resulting from the
trial court's failure to instruct the jury that Clark would be
ineligible for parole for thirty-five years if sentenced to life
imprisonment; (4) the denial of effective assistance as guaranteed
by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments at a critical stage during
Clark's direct appeal that precluded him from seeking a rehearing in
the Court of Criminal Appeals and a petition for writ of certiorari
to the United States Supreme Court; and (5) the denial of effective
assistance of counsel at the punishment stage of the capital murder
trial during which Clark's counsel presented no favorable evidence
despite its availability, in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments.
Clark additionally challenges the federal
district court's refusal to permit discovery or to hold an
evidentiary hearing to determine the validity of Clark's claim of a
Brady violation and of ineffective assistance of counsel at the
punishment stage.
This case is governed by the AEDPA because
Clark's petition for federal habeas relief was filed on July 27,
1998, after the AEDPA effective date of April 24, 1996. See Green v.
Johnson, 116 F.3d 1115, 1119-20 (5th Cir.1997). As Clark seeks to
appeal “the final order in a habeas corpus proceeding in which the
detention complained of arises out of process issued by a State
court,” he must first obtain a COA. 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1)(A). A COA
may issue only if Clark “has made a substantial showing of the
denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). “Such a
showing requires the applicant to demonstrate that the issues are
debatable among jurists of reason; that a court could resolve the
issues in a different manner; or that the questions are adequate to
deserve encouragement to proceed further.” Hill v. Johnson, 210 F.3d
481, 484 (5th Cir.2000) (citing and quoting Drinkard v. Johnson, 97
F.3d 751, 755 (5th Cir.1996), overruled in part on other grounds by
Lindh v. Murphy, 521 U.S. 320, 326, 117 S.Ct. 2059, 138 L.Ed.2d 481
(1997) and Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 120 S.Ct. 1495, 146
L.Ed.2d 389 (2000)) (internal quotation marks and additional
citations omitted).
Where, as here, the district court has rejected a
prisoner's constitutional claims on the merits, the applicant must
demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the district court's
assessment of the constitutional claims debatable or wrong. See
Hernandez v. Johnson, 213 F.3d 243, 248 (5th Cir.2000)(citing Slack
v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 120 S.Ct. 1595, 1603-04, 146 L.Ed.2d 542
(2000)). “We resolve doubts about whether to grant a COA in [a
petitioner's] favor, and we may consider the severity of his penalty
in determining whether he has met his ‘substantial showing’ burden.”
Hill, 210 F.3d at 484 (citing Fuller v. Johnson, 114 F.3d 491, 495
(5th Cir.1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 963, 118 S.Ct. 399, 139 L.Ed.2d
312 (1997)).
a) Brady due process violation claim.
In Brady v. Maryland, the Supreme Court held that
a prosecutor must disclose evidence to a criminal defendant if that
evidence is favorable to the defendant and material to the
defendant's guilt or punishment. 373 U.S. at 87, 83 S.Ct. 1194. The
Supreme Court has found evidence material “if there is a reasonable
probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense,
the result of the proceeding would have been different.” United
States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682, 105 S.Ct. 3375, 87 L.Ed.2d 481
(1985). “The question is not whether the defendant would more likely
than not have received a different verdict with the evidence, but
whether in its absence he received a fair trial, understood as a
trial resulting in a verdict of confidence. A ‘reasonable
probability’ of a different result is accordingly shown when the
government's evidentiary suppression ‘undermines confidence in the
outcome of trial.’ ” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434, 115 S.Ct.
1555, 131 L.Ed.2d 490 (1995)(citing Bagley, 473 U.S. at 678, 105
S.Ct. 3375).
Clark maintains that during his capital murder
trial the state prosecutor argued that Clark had shot Cari Crews and
Jesus Garza, whereas at the subsequent trial of Clark's co-defendant,
James Brown, the prosecutor argued that Brown was the lone
triggerman in the murders. Allegedly, the prosecutor's arguments at
the Clark trial were based upon the testimony of Dr. John
Kristofferson, Brown's orthopedic surgeon, who opined that Brown,
due to the seriousness of a gunshot wound accidentally inflicted
prior to the murders, was not likely able to walk or stand at the
time Crews and Garza were killed.
This testimony, in conjunction with the expert
testimony from the autopsy physician, Dr. Marc Krouse, as to the
muzzle-to-wound distance and entry wound location regarding Garza
indicating that the shotgun was fired while being held parallel to
the front of Garza's torso, allowed the prosecutor to argue that
Clark was the triggerman since Brown was injured too severely to
load the shotgun and because “it wasn't just somebody laying on the
ground, aiming a shotgun at somebody and shooting them.”FN1
FN1. Because the murder weapon was a double
barrel shotgun and because Brown was accidentally shot in the leg
prior to the murders before Crews and Garza were killed, someone
must have unloaded the spent cartridge and reloaded the shotgun.
Later, at Brown's trial, the prosecution argued
that Brown was the triggerman in both murders. This argument was
again based in part upon expert testimony given by the autopsy
physician, Dr. Marc Krouse, concerning the muzzle-to-wound distance
with respect to Jesus Garza. Clark argues that in Brown's trial Dr.
Krouse's opinion of the muzzle-to-wound distance was “manicured” or
revised to “just a few inches” instead of “a couple of feet” as he
had testified in Clark's trial.
Clark argues that the difference between the
versions of Dr. Krouse's expert opinions was material and favorable
to his defense, but was not available to his trial counsel for use
at his trial. According to Clark, had this evidence been available
to him, he too could have advanced the same argument in his trial
that the prosecution advanced subsequently in Brown's trial:
Whoever shot Garza right here in the left side of
the jaw, whoever shot him had that gun three or four inches below
his chin. This gun is some 24 inches long. You heard testimony to
that. Where does that put the trigger? That's the kind of awkward
position for someone facing Jesus [Garza] to pull the trigger and
shoot him here. What is that consistent with? What this wound and
this shotgun are consistent with is that the shooter is sitting. And
either Jesus was standing over him posing a threat, or Jesus was as
Brown said, lying unconscious on the ground, and the shooter sitting
on the ground shot him there. That's what the physical evidence
tells you.
The district court rejected Clark's argument,
concluding that (1) Dr. Krouse's testimony in both trials was
essentially consistent, i.e., in both cases he in effect testified
that Garza was killed by a shot fired a short distance from his head
(“a couple of feet” in Clark's trial and “just a few inches” in
Brown's trial) and therefore did not suggest a suppression of
evidence; and (2) that, assuming Dr. Krouse's testimony was
significantly inconsistent with respect to Garza's fatal wound, that
inconsistency would not have tended to exculpate Clark from the
crime of which he was convicted-the capital murder of Cari Crews.
We cannot say that the district court erred in
either finding. We find that Clark has failed to state a Brady claim
as he has failed to show suppression and materiality. Clark has
presented no proof of suppression. “[C]losing arguments are not
evidence. Moreover, a prosecutor can make inconsistent arguments at
the separate trials of codefendants without violating the due
process clause.” Beathard v. Johnson, 177 F.3d 340, 348 (5th
Cir.1999).
There is also no proof that the prosecution
suppressed any evidence regarding Dr. Krouse's testimony because the
testimony was not markedly different in the two trials. Moreover,
Clark fails to demonstrate materiality because as the prosecutor's
argument in Brown's case indicates, a muzzle-to-wound distance
regarding Garza of “just a few inches” does not make it any more
likely that Garza was killed by a shot from a sitting rather than a
standing position. Accordingly, Clark has failed to make a
substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right with
respect to his claim of a Brady violation.
b) Enmund and Tison claim.
Clark argues that a violation of his Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendment rights resulted from the prosecution's
inconsistent arguments regarding the identity of the actual shooter
in combination with the trial court's instructions permitting a
conviction and death sentence without the jury finding that Clark
actually killed, attempted to kill, or intended that a human life be
taken, in violation of Enmund v. Florida, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S.Ct.
3368, 73 L.Ed.2d 1140 (1982), and Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137,
107 S.Ct. 1676, 95 L.Ed.2d 127 (1987).
Enmund v. Florida held that the death penalty may
not be imposed on one who “aids and abets a felony in the course of
which a murder is committed by others but who does not himself kill,
attempt to kill, or intend that a killing take place or that lethal
force will be employed.” 458 U.S. at 797, 102 S.Ct. 3368. Sentenced
to death, Enmund had driven the “getaway” car for two others who had
robbed and killed an elderly couple.
Focusing on Enmund's individualized culpability,
the Court found that he did not kill, attempt to kill, or intend to
kill; thus, the imposition of the death penalty was impermissible
under the Eighth Amendment. Id. at 798, 458 U.S. 782. Tison v.
Arizona subsequently limited Enmund by holding that “major
participation in the felony committed, combined with reckless
indifference to human life, is sufficient to satisfy the Enmund
culpability requirement.” 481 U.S. at 158, 107 S.Ct. 1676.
Clark contends that two different instructions
violated Enmund and Tison. First, he argues that the use of Texas
Penal Code § 7.02(b), FN2 governing liability of co-conspirators, at
the guilt/innocence phase violates Enmund and Tison because it does
not require the co-conspirator to have the intent to commit murder.
However, Enmund and Tison apply to the sentencing phase of the trial
and not to the guilt/innocence phase. See Enmund, 458 U.S. at 801,
102 S.Ct. 3368, and Tison, 481 U.S. at 157, 107 S.Ct. 1676. See also
Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639, 649, 110 S.Ct. 3047, 111 L.Ed.2d
511 (1990)(“Enmund only places ‘a substantive limitation on
sentencing, and like other such limits it need not be enforced by
the jury.’ ”); Cabana v. Bullock, 474 U.S. 376, 385, 106 S.Ct. 689,
88 L.Ed.2d 704 (1986)(“Rather, as the Fifth Circuit itself has
recognized, Enmund ‘does not affect the state's definition of any
substantive offense, even a capital offense.’ ”)(citing Reddix v.
Thigpen, 728 F.2d 705, 709 (5th Cir.1984)); and Cantu v. State, 939
S.W.2d 627, 645 (Tex.Crim.App.1997)(“Both Tison and Enmund were
concerned with the implementation of the death penalty on defendants
who were not proven to have an intent to kill.”). Therefore, Clark's
argument based on Enmund and Tison with respect to this instruction
is without merit.
FN2. Texas Penal Code § 7.02(b) provides: “If, in
the attempt to carry out a conspiracy to commit one felony, another
felony is committed by one of the conspirators, all conspirators are
guilty of the felony actually committed, though having no intent to
commit it, if the offense was committed in furtherance of the
unlawful purpose and was one that should have been anticipated as a
result of the carrying out of the conspiracy.”
Secondly, Clark contends that Special Issue
Number Two, given during the sentencing phase, dispensed with the
requirement of finding specific intent by allowing the jury to
sentence Clark to death on the basis that he “anticipated” a human
life would be taken. Relying on Texas Criminal Procedure Article
37.071, the state court gave the following instruction:
Do you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable
doubt that the defendant, James Lee Clark, actually caused the death
of Shari Catherine Crews, the deceased, on the occasion in question,
or if he did not actually cause the decedent's death, that he
intended to kill the deceased or another, or that he anticipated
that a human life would be taken?
You are instructed that in answering this issue
only the conduct of the defendant can be considered, and that the
instruction pertaining to the law of parties heretofore given you
cannot now be considered in answering this issue.
The jury unanimously answered yes, and
subsequently, Clark was sentenced to death. In an unpublished
decision affirming the conviction and sentence, the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals stated, “The principle is well-established that
when a jury returns a general verdict and the evidence is sufficient
to support a finding of guilt under any of the allegations submitted,
the verdict will be upheld.” Looking at the evidence, the court
determined that it was sufficient to support the theory that Clark
murdered Crews during the course of committing a sexual assault.FN3
FN3. In a habeas proceeding with no evidentiary
hearing, the state court denied Clark's petition for relief on this
issue by summarily relying on Lawton v. State, 913 S.W.2d 542 (Tex.Crim.App.1995).
The court stated, “[T]hat the jury may have found that appellant
only anticipated that death would result under Article 37.071 is
inconsequential to Enmund and Tison concerns; the jury had already
found that appellant intended to at least promote or assist in the
commission of an intentional murder.” 913 S.W.2d at 555.
However, Lawton is inapplicable because its
holding concerned felony murder. Furthermore, the dicta which the
state court cites is also inapplicable because it quotes Texas Penal
Statute 7.02(a)(2) (“A person is criminally responsible for an
offense committed by the conduct of another if: ... (2) acting with
intent to promote or assist the commission of the offense, he
solicits, encourages, directs, aids, or attempts to aid the other
person to commit the offense ...”), not section 7.02(b), which is in
dispute.
Clark's jury rendered a general verdict. As such,
we cannot be confident that the jury did not convict Clark based on
his liability as a co-conspirator in the sexual assault or robbery
of the victim. “But the conclusion that the jury may not have found
that the defendant killed, attempted to kill, or intended a killing
take place or that lethal force be employed does not end the inquiry
into whether Enmund bars the death sentence; rather it is only the
first step.” Bullock, 474 U.S. at 384, 106 S.Ct. 689.
Reversing the Fifth Circuit, the Supreme Court
specifically rejected the argument that a jury alone must make the
Enmund determination. See id. “Rather, the [federal habeas] court
must examine the entire course of the state-court proceedings
against the defendant in order to determine whether, at some point
in the process, the requisite factual finding as to the defendant's
culpability has been made. If it has, the finding must be presumed
correct.” Id. at 387-88, 106 S.Ct. 689. The necessary finding of
intent under Enmund may be made by a trial court or an appellate
court. Id. at 389, 106 S.Ct. 689.
The findings of the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals are constitutionally sufficient under Enmund and Tison.
Pursuant to Clark's argument that there was insufficient evidence to
support a conviction of capital murder, the court found that “a
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
murder in the course of aggravated sexual assault.”
The court pointed to the DNA evidence linking
Clark to the sexual assault and blood spatter evidence linking Clark
to the murder and then concluded that the evidence was sufficient to
prove murder during a sexual assault. On a related issue of future
dangerousness, the court further found that Clark assaulted and
executed Crews. (“They [Clark and Brown] made the girl strip and
apparently tied her hands with her own bra and then appellant
[Clark] brutally sexually assaulted her-both vaginally and anally.
Appellant then put the shotgun to her head and executed her.”)
These findings show specific intent under Enmund
or at the very least, major participation in the felony committed
with reckless indifference to human life under Tison. 458 U.S. at
797, 102 S.Ct. 3368, 481 U.S. at 158, 107 S.Ct. 1676.
Thus, under the principles of Bullock, there has
been a “determination from [Texas'] own courts of the factual
question whether [Clark] killed, attempted to kill, intended to kill,
or intended that the lethal force would be used.” 474 U.S. at 392,
106 S.Ct. 689. See also Stewart v. Collins, 978 F.2d 199 (5th
Cir.1992)(upholding a capital murder conviction and sentence on the
basis of the jury verdict and answers to the special issues along
with findings of the Court of Criminal Appeals). Clark has not made
a substantial showing of a denial of a constitutional right to be
free from cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments, and no COA will issue.
c) Jury instruction due process violation
claim.
Clark argues that the trial court's failure to
instruct the jury that he would not be eligible for parole for
thirty-five years if sentenced to life imprisonment violated Simmons
v. South Carolina, 512 U.S. 154, 114 S.Ct. 2187, 129 L.Ed.2d 133
(1994). However, Clark's claim is barred under the non-retroactivity
limitation in Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 103 L.Ed.2d
334 (1989). As a threshold matter, a state prisoner must demonstrate
that the rule of which he seeks benefit is not “new.” O'Dell v.
Netherland, 521 U.S. 151, 156, 117 S.Ct. 1969, 138 L.Ed.2d 351
(1997).
A rule is new if it “breaks new ground,” “imposes
a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government,” or was
not “dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant's
conviction became final.” Graham v. Collins, 506 U.S. 461, 467, 113
S.Ct. 892, 122 L.Ed.2d 260 (1993)(citing Teague, 489 U.S. at 301,
109 S.Ct. 1060).
Clark urges us to adopt a rule that would allow
him to present evidence concerning his thirty-five year
ineligibility for parole. This rule is certainly new as Simmons was
based on lifetime parole ineligibility. 512 U.S. at 169, 114 S.Ct.
2187. See also Ramdass v. Angelone, 530 U.S. 156, 120 S.Ct. 2113,
2121, 147 L.Ed.2d 125 (2000)(“Simmons applies only to instances
where, as a legal matter, there is no possibility of parole if the
jury decides the appropriate sentence is life in prison.”).
Because this new rule fails to meet the narrow
exceptions of Teague, namely rules forbidding punishment of certain
primary conduct or watershed rules of criminal procedure, it may not
be applied retroactively to Clark's trial. See also Allridge v.
Scott, 41 F.3d 213, 222 n. 11 (5th Cir.1994)(“Specifically, if we
were to conclude ... that due process entitles a capital defendant
to introduce evidence of parole ineligibility whenever the state
argues the defendant is a future danger, regardless of whether the
state statutorily provides for parole ineligibility, such a
conclusion certainly would constitute a ‘new rule’ and therefore
would be barred under Teague.”). Accordingly, Clark has failed to
make a substantial showing of the denial of constitutional right of
due process on this claim, and no COA will issue.
d) Ineffective assistance of counsel claims.
To prevail on an ineffective assistance of
counsel claim, Clark must show that his counsel's performance was
deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced his defense. See
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d
674 (1984). Counsel's performance is deficient when the
representation falls below an objective standard of reasonableness.
See id. and Davis v. Johnson, 158 F.3d 806, 812 (5th Cir.1998). In
assessing counsel's performance, we must make every effort “to
eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
circumstances of counsel's challenged conduct, and to evaluate the
conduct from counsel's perspective at the time.” Strickland, 466 U.S.
at 689, 104 S.Ct. 2052. There is a strong presumption that counsel's
conduct falls within the wide range of objectively reasonable
conduct. See id.
To establish that the counsel's deficiency
prejudiced his defense, Clark “must show that there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the
result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 694, 104
S.Ct. 2052. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id.
1. Ineffective assistance of counsel on direct
appeal.FN4
FN4. This Circuit's decision in Jackson v.
Johnson, 217 F.3d 360 (5th Cir.2000), forecloses the retroactivity
issue presented by Teague v. Lane, which prevented granting habeas
relief based on a rule announced after a defendant's conviction. The
Fifth Circuit found that a claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel based on a failure to file for rehearing was a narrow
exception to Teague. 217 F.3d at 364.
Clark argues that he was denied his right to
counsel in preparing a motion for rehearing to the Court of Criminal
Appeals and a writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme
Court.FN5 This argument is unsupported as the Supreme Court has not
extended the right of counsel to discretionary review. Due process
does require the appointment of effective counsel for a criminal
appellant pursuing a first appeal of right. Evitts v. Lucey, 469 U.S.
387, 392, 105 S.Ct. 830, 83 L.Ed.2d 821 (1985).
However, Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600, 610, 94
S.Ct. 2437, 41 L.Ed.2d 341 (1974), held that it was constitutional
under due process to not provide counsel on discretionary appeal.FN6
The Texas Constitution provides, “The appeal of all cases in which
the death penalty has been assessed shall be to the Court of
Criminal Appeals.” Tex. Const. Code Ann. Art. 5, § 5 (West 2000).
Therefore, the right of appeal is to the Court of
Criminal Appeals, and not for a petition for rehearing to that court
or a petition to the United States Supreme Court. See Ayala v. State,
633 S.W.2d 526, 528 (Tex.Crim.App.1982)(holding that “[i]ndigent
appellants are not deprived of the effective assistance of counsel
if appointed counsel fail to file a petition for discretionary
review of a court of appeals' decision.”)(citing Wainwright v.
Torna, 455 U.S. 586, 102 S.Ct. 1300, 71 L.Ed.2d 475 (1982)).
The Supreme Court itself has defined its review
as discretionary and found the argument that a state should provide
counsel to one petitioning the Court to be “unsupported by either
reason or authority.” Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. at 616-17, 94 S.Ct.
2437. Furthermore, the Fifth Circuit has pointedly stated, “[T]here
can be no question that the granting of a motion for rehearing lies
entirely within the discretion of a court of appeals.
Rehearing at that point is by no means an appeal
of right.” Jackson, 217 F.3d at 365. Also, a Texas court has held
that because there is no right to counsel for a discretionary review,
the appellate counsel has no duty to even advise the appellant about
the merits of the review. Ex parte Wilson, 956 S.W.2d 25, 27 (Tex.Crim.App.1997).
Accordingly, Clark has failed to make a substantial showing of the
denial of a constitutional right on this claim as there is no
constitutional right, and no COA will issue.
FN5. Because there is no constitutional right to
counsel for discretionary appeals, we need not analyze this claim
under Strickland. FN6. “The defendant needs an attorney on appeal
not as a shield to protect him against being ‘haled into court’ by
the State and stripped of his presumption of innocence, but rather
as a sword to upset the prior determination of guilt.” 417 U.S. at
610-11, 94 S.Ct. 2437. However, in Blankenship v. Johnson, 118 F.3d
312, 317 (5th Cir.1997), the Fifth Circuit found a right to counsel
on state-requested discretionary review.
2. Ineffective assistance of counsel at
punishment phase of trial.
Clark argues that he was denied effective
assistance of counsel at the punishment phase of his trial when
appointed counsel failed to present any available evidence at the
punishment phase. The defendant bears the burden of showing by a
preponderance of evidence that he was deprived of the right of
effective counsel. Martin v. Maggio, 711 F.2d 1273, 1279 (5th
Cir.1983). “Failure to meet either the deficient performance prong
or the prejudice prong will defeat a claim for ineffective
assistance of counsel.” United States v. Stewart, 207 F.3d 750 (5th
Cir.2000).
Clark fails to meet his burden of proof for both
prongs of the test. First he fails to show deficient performance.
Clark argues that it was an unsound trial strategy to not call
subpoenaed witnesses, but he does not explain who was subpoenaed and
the importance of their testimony. The record only indicates that
Clark had an extensive criminal record; thus, it appears counsel
made a “strategy choice ... well within the range of professionally
reasonable judgments.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 699, 104 S.Ct. 2052.
See Jones v. Thigpen, 788 F.2d 1101 (5th Cir.1986)(finding failure
to present mitigating factors of youth and mental retardation was
deficient performance).
Furthermore, Clark himself testified that he made
the decision not to call any witnesses after talking with his
attorneys the day before. “ ‘[M]eaningful discussion with one's
client’ is one of the ‘cornerstones of effective assistance of
counsel.’ ” Martin, 711 F.2d at 1280 (citing Gaines v. Hopper, 575
F.2d 1147, 1149-50 (5th Cir.1978)). Secondly, Clark attempts to
argue that a failure to put on evidence constitutes a constructive
denial of counsel and thus prejudice is presumed. However, there is
a “strong presumption of reliability” attached to judicial
proceedings. Roe v. Flores-Ortega, 528 U.S. 470, 120 S.Ct. 1029,
1037, 145 L.Ed.2d 985 (2000).
Unlike in Flores-Ortega, where counsel neglected
to file a notice of appeal, Clark's counsel subpoenaed witnesses in
preparation, but ultimately allowed Clark to decide whether to
present them. These actions do not constitute a denial of counsel,
actual or constructive. Even if we assume Clark's counsel's
performance was defective, Clark has failed “to show the existence
of evidence of sufficient quality and force to raise a reasonable
probability that, had it been presented to the jury, a life sentence
would have resulted.” Wilkerson v. Collins, 950 F.2d 1054, 1065 (5th
Cir.1992). Accordingly, Clark has failed to make a substantial
showing of the denial of a constitutional right on this claim, and
no COA will issue.
e) Evidentiary hearing claim.
AEDPA governs requests for evidentiary hearing
under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2).FN7 After that standard is met, the
district court's denial is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Murphy
v. Johnson, 205 F.3d 809, 815 (5th Cir.2000). Assuming Clark meets
the AEDPA standard because he was denied a hearing in state court,
see id. at 815, nevertheless, the district court did not abuse its
discretion in failing to grant a hearing. Our resolution of the
issues demonstrates that Clark has failed to show a significant
factual dispute on his Brady claim that could be addressed by a
hearing, and failed to show how his claim of ineffective assistance
of counsel would be advanced by a hearing. No COA will issue on the
refusal of the district court to hold an evidentiary hearing.
FN7. “If the applicant has failed to develop the
factual basis of a claim in State court proceedings, the court shall
not hold an evidentiary hearing on the claim unless the applicant
shows that (A) the claim relies on (i) a new rule of constitutional
law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme
court, that was previously unavailable; or (ii) a factual predicate
that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise
of due diligence; and (B) the facts underlying the claim would be
sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that but
for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found
the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.”
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we deny Clark's
request for a COA on all issues. Application DENIED.
Clark v. Quarterman, 457 F.3d 441 (5th
Cir. 2006) (Federal Habeas).
Background: Defendant convicted of capital murder
in state court and sentenced to death petitioned for federal habeas
relief. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Texas, David Folsom, J., denied relief. Defendant appealed.
Holding: The Court of Appeals, Dennis, Circuit
Judge, held that state court did not unreasonably determine that
defendant did not have significantly subaverage intellectual
functioning, as required to find him mentally retarded under state
law and preclude his execution. Affirmed.
DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
The defendant, James Lee Clark, has filed a successive habeas
petition in this case, arguing that the evidence presented to the
state courts established that he suffers from significantly sub-average
intellectual functioning to the point of mental retardation and thus
may not be executed.
The district court concluded that the state court
did not err in finding that Clark had failed to establish that he
had significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning, the
first element of the Texas test for mental retardation, and did not
proceed further to the other elements.
Clark argues that the district court erred in
upholding the state court's findings on that element and erred in
refusing to consider Clark's arguments as to the other elements of
the test. Upon our review, we determine that the district court did
not err in affirming the state court as to the “significantly
sub-average intellectual functioning” element of mental retardation
and that the district court did not err in considering only that
element.
*****
Initially, we note that Clark is incorrect in
arguing that the district court erred in failing to address the
other elements of mental retardation under the Texas definitions
after it had determined that the state court did not err in finding
that Clark did not have significantly sub-average intellectual
functioning.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals adopted two
definitions of mental retardation in the aftermath of Atkins, both
of which contain the same substantive elements. The first, the AAMR
definition, defined mental retardation as a disability characterized
by “(1) ‘significantly subaverage’ general intellectual functioning;
(2) accompanied by ‘related’ limitations in adaptive functioning;
(3) the onset of which occurs prior to the age of 18.” Ex parte
Briseno, 135 S.W.3d 1, 7 (Tex.Crim.App.2004).
The second, from the Texas Health and Safety
Code, requires “significantly subaverage general intellectual
functioning that is concurrent with deficits in adaptive behavior
and originates during the developmental period.” Id. It is plain
from the use of the words “accompanied by” and “concurrent” that
both of these definitions require that all three elements exist to
establish mental retardation.
It therefore was not in error for the district
court to determine that Clark could not prevail once it had already
held that the state court had not erred in holding that Clark failed
to meet the first element. If the state court correctly found that
Clark failed to meet any of the three elements, he cannot
demonstrate mental retardation under the Texas definitions.
We agree with Clark's contention that the
question of whether he suffers from significantly subaverage
intellectual functioning is a question of fact, and not a mixed
question of law and fact as determined by the district court. See
United States v. Webster, 162 F.3d 308, 351-52 (5th Cir.1998)
(discussing, in the context of the Federal Death Penalty Act, that
the judge may act as fact-finder on the issue of mental
retardation). However, Clark also raises the separate, legal
question of whether federal law permits the state court the
discretion to choose as the relevant score the base IQ score or the
low point on the range that the score represents.
We review questions of law to determine whether
the State court adjudication “resulted in a decision that was
contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the
United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). But we review questions of
fact for whether the state court decision was based upon “an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the State court proceedings.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
The burden is on Clark to rebut the state court's determination with
clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
Clark raises issues with respect to each of the
three elements of mental retardation in Texas. With respect to the
first element, the question of whether Clark had significantly
subaverage intellectual functioning, Clark argues that the state
court erred in considering the numerical IQ scores of Clark's tests
instead of the “confidence band,” or range of potential “true”
scores someone with Clark's score falls within. This confidence band
is designed to account for the measurement error inherent in
intelligence testing, and indicates the upper and lower scores
between which a psychologist conducting the test can be ninety-five
percent confident that the “true” score lies.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held when
adopting its tests for mental retardation that scores gathered
through intelligence testing are necessarily imprecise and must be
interpreted flexibly. Briseno, 135 S.W.3d at 7, n. 24. The testing
error, coupled with the differences between various IQ tests, mean
that in many cases an individual who tests as having an IQ above 70,
the rough cut-off for mental retardation, may still be diagnosed as
mentally retarded, and vice versa. Id. Under this approach, courts
should not rigidly consider an IQ score to be determinative of the
defendant's intellectual functioning.
To support his argument that the state court
erred in choosing his base IQ score as the relevant IQ score rather
than the lowest number in the confidence band, Clark argues that the
Texas courts must apply the approach articulated by the American
Association on Mental Retardation (“AAMR”), which dictates that IQ
examiners account for the appropriate confidence band. He argues
that the AAMR approach is the proper standard for determining
whether an individual has subaverage intellectual functioning. Clark
is thus asking us to consider whether the Texas courts were properly
given the discretion to choose between a base IQ score and a
confidence band, see Briseno, 135 S.W.3d at 14 n. 53.
The Supreme Court, in Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S.
304, 122 S.Ct. 2242, 153 L.Ed.2d 335 (2002), “[left] to the State[s]
the task of developing ways to enforce the constitutional
restriction upon [their] execution of sentences.” Id. at 317, 122
S.Ct. 2242. Although the Court did refer to the clinical definitions
of mental retardation promulgated by the AAMR and the American
Psychiatric Association (“APA”), it did not dictate that the
approach and the analysis of the State inquiry must track the
approach of the AAMR or the APA exactly. It also did not mention the
portion of the AAMR Manual upon which Clark relies in his argument.
Therefore it is not “clearly established Federal law as determined
by the Supreme Court of the United States” that state court analysis
of subaverage intellectual functioning must precisely track the
AAMR's recommended approach. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
Under the definition of mental retardation as
established by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state court
did not unreasonably determine the facts in light of the evidence
relating to Clark's intellectual functioning. The court was
confronted with multiple IQ tests taken by Clark. The first, taken
in November of 1983 when Clark was 15, measured his IQ at 74.
The “true” IQ range indicated by the confidence
band for this test was 69 to 79. On April 17, 2003, after the Atkins
decision, Clark took another test which measured his IQ at 65. The
confidence band of this test indicated that his IQ ranged from 60 to
70. On June 5, 2003, Clark took a third IQ test which measured his
IQ at 68, with a confidence range of 64 to 72.
Clark contends that the state court acknowledged
the confidence bands, but “simply chose not to apply the standard
error of measurement to Clark's IQ score of 74.” This is incorrect.
Regarding the 1983 IQ test, the state court noted that the test
showed Clark's IQ to be “in the range of 69 to 79.” More important
to the state court were its findings based on its evaluation of
expert testimony on the IQ tests.
The court evaluated both of the tests
administered to Clark in 2003, and it found that these specific
tests were subject to manipulation that would result in lower scores
and that in 2003 Clark had motivation to lower his scores
deliberately.
The court also found that there was an unusual
discrepancy in Clark's subscores on one of the 2003 tests indicating
a higher IQ. The court further found that the 1983 score was
considered reliable by Clark's experts and that the psychologist who
conducted the test noted based on his observations that Clark's
intellectual functioning fell between the dull average and average
range.
Clark has not challenged any of these findings,
and instead asserts only that it was error for the state court to
find mental retardation where the lowest potential score in the
confidence band of the 1983 test was below 70. The explanation
provided by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in adopting its
definition of mental retardation plainly forecloses this argument.
Briseno, 135 S.W.3d at 7, n. 24.
The state court was required to evaluate the
intelligence testing and make a flexible determination based on
those tests as to whether Clark had “significantly subaverage
general intellectual functioning.” The court was not required to
find Clark to be mentally retarded merely because the low end of
Clark's confidence band was below 70, just as it would not be
required to find that Clark could be executed on the basis that the
high end of this band fell above 70. Clark thus has not shown that
the state court made an unreasonable determination of the facts in
light of the evidence as to the first element of mental retardation.
While, as discussed above, all three elements of
mental retardation must be shown in order to meet the Texas
definition, we review Clark's arguments as to the other elements out
of an abundance of caution and because the evidence as to these
elements is informative as to the state court's belief that Clark
may have attempted to manipulate his 2003 IQ scores.
Clark has challenged the state court's finding
that he did not have adaptive deficits. Clark argues here that
“limitations often coexist with strengths” and that the state court
erred in dismissing adaptive behavior testing and relying
“exclusively upon the court's own interpretation of lay testimony
about Clark's adaptive strengths.”
The record shows that the state court made a
number of findings of fact that support its finding that Clark did
not have significant limitations in his adaptive skills. The court
found that records from Clark's youth showed that he completed his
GED with improving grades after initial problems, that he completed
a welding program at Cooke County College in 1985, that he was
employed by the Gainesville State School with numerous duties and
positive reports from supervisors, and that he was able to get along
with other people.
The state court also heard testimony from Clark's
former landlord that he was a tenant of a mobile home park, where he
was paying his own bills, doing chores in exchange for rent
reduction, playing cards, and successfully socializing with others.
The landlord testified that he followed the rules of the park, kept
his mobile home clean and cut the nearby grass, and was able to both
drive a car and follow the speed limits of the park. The landlord's
daughter testified to similar activities by Clark, and added that
they had conversed on a number of occasions without difficulty.
A Texas Ranger who investigated the case
testified that he interviewed Clark for several hours without
noticing any difficulty by Clark in understanding the questions. He
stated that Clark was able to think on his feet, modifying his story
in response to inconsistencies that were pointed out to him. He
further testified that Clark's actions in the crime included several
that showed adaptive functioning, including removing the butt stock
of his gun to make it easier to conceal, purchasing ammunition for
the gun, practicing with the gun, and removing evidence from the
scene and concealing it. He testified that his investigation of
Clark showed no evidence of adaptive limitations or problems meeting
basic human needs.
The court listened to testimony from several
other officers and prison officials who had interacted with Clark.
It also heard testimony from the warden's secretary, responsible for
handling inmate requests, and found that several of Clark's written
requests indicate adaptive skills ranging from average to
sophisticated.
Clark has not challenged the accuracy of any of
these findings, but instead argues only that they do not support the
state court's determination that Clark did not have adaptive
deficits because they are evidence of strengths and not limitations.
This is incorrect-evidence of a strength in a
particular area of adaptive functioning necessarily shows that the
defendant does not have a weakness in that particular area. Even if,
as Clark argues, adaptive limitations rather than strengths often
define mental retardation, the evidence in this case shows primarily
adaptive strengths and does not show limitation in any significant
area.
The evidence in this case showed that prior to
being incarcerated, Clark functioned normally across a broad range
of adaptive behaviors. Our review of the evidence of Clark's
behavior in prison casts serious doubts on his claims of adaptive
limitation, as evidence collected from his cell along with his
handwritten requests include complaints that he needed a technician
to fix his television as it had been several “weeks now of no
reception via my coaxial cable hooked up to the jack on the wall;” a
handwritten diet plan entitled “Eat to Beat Stress” noting that he
should “eat small meals and snacks several times a day to keep blood
sugar from fluctuating” as well as notes about the effects of
various chemicals such as folic acid, pyridoxine, and thiamine;
handwritten puzzles including the decipherment of several extremely
complicated codes; and complaints about delays in approving his
request for a legal visit with another inmate in which Clark planned
to assist the inmate in obtaining parole.
Clark faults the failure of the state court to
credit an adaptive behavior assessment administered at age 34 which
attempted to retroactively determine his abilities at age 25. The
court found that the test was unreliable because it relied on
Clark's self-reporting of his adaptive limitations coupled only with
his ex-wife's memories about what he could and could not do at age
25.
The court found that this testing was unreliable
because it did not account for the incentive of Clark and his ex-wife
to misreport Clark's adaptive skills and did not take into account
Clark's prior employment and the written materials he produced
during prison. The court heard the testimony of the State's expert
claiming Clark did not display limitations in adaptive functioning.
This expert reviewed the testing results along with the various
testimony and documents and was judged more credible by the state
court.
The findings by the state court on the issue of
adaptive functioning have not been rebutted by clear and convincing
evidence, and its determination that the evidence of Clark's actual
behavior was more credible than the adaptive behavior assessment
administered to Clark was not unreasonable in light of the evidence
presented.
Finally, Clark objects that as to the third
element of retardation, onset before the age of 18, the state court
again erred in its factual finding that Clark did not show onset
before the age of 18. Clark points to the opinions of his expert
witnesses, his failure of several grades, and his participation in
special education classes in school.
While the state court provides less support for
its determination on this issue, pointing only to documents about
Clark produced by the Texas Youth Council when he was age 15, Clark
has not rebutted these findings by clear and convincing evidence.
The TYC documents describe Clark as a troubled child with
intellectual potential between the dull average and average range.
The TYC conducted an IQ test which, as the state court determined
under the first element, showed that at age 15 Clark was not
mentally retarded. The state court did not make an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence as to the age of
onset element.
Because Clark has not shown by clear and
convincing evidence that the state court made unreasonable factual
determinations in light of the evidence presented, we AFFIRM the
decision of the district court.